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BEYOND THE FIVE SENSES 

 
 
 
 
 
 

BY 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

L MARGERY BAZETT 

 
 
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

BASIL BLACKWELL: OXFORD 

1946 

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AUTHOR’S PREFACE 

 
 
THIS volume deals with certain phenomena that one comes across when stepping out 
of the world of sense to that which lies beyond it; that is, to the supernormal or 
transcendental, or whatever people prefer to call it. 
 
It covers a number of very diverse perceptions; and there are, of course, others beyond 
these in so vast a field of research. 
 
In this region of supersense, we may expect to find the mind expanding beyond 
normal limits, reaching out to individuals over any distance (in a telepathic sense) and 
picking up threads here and there from bygone periods of history. 
 
Likewise, this extended sight reaches out into the future, perceiving what has not as 
yet come within normal vision. Both these functions touch upon that much-debated 
question of the nature of Time. 
 
Other examples point to the mind being able in some degree to overcome the 
limitations of space. 
 
Others would suggest that even physical death may no longer prove so formidable a 
barrier as formerly, in view of these extended powers of the mind. 
 
As yet, knowledge along these lines is limited, but there is hope that much may come 
to light as research progresses. 
 
Taking all in conjunction, we can assume that in this region beyond sense-perception 
there is at work a definite law or laws, although of a different order from those which 
obtain in this world of sense-apprehension. 
 
From all this, we may infer that purpose and design are in operation, and that they 
touch vitally the life and destiny of mankind. 
 
Such order within the universe as we now dimly perceive leaves little place for the 
supposition that the phenomena here described are extraneous to modern thought. It 
were truer to say that strange and unclassifiable though many of them appear, they 
may eventually prove to have considerable signifcance in their relation to psychology, 
religion, and other departments of human knowledge. 
 
 

THE FIRS, 
     REDHILL, 
          SURREY 

 

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FOREWORD BY MRS OSBORNE LEONARD 

 
 
BY writing this excellent and interesting book I feel that Margery Bazett has done a 
great service to the general public who are more or less unaware of the possibilities of 
using the so-called supernormal faculties in everyday life. 
 
A large number of people are still under the impression that clairvoyance is a 
mysterious art, practised by somewhat peculiar individuals who seem to be invested 
with singular  -  even sinister  -  powers, which they exercise within the confines of a 
dark and mysterious room  -  the séance-room. 
 
Apparently, they are unaware that many persons of considerable ability in different 
walks of life, doctors, lawyers, University professors, astute business men, and others, 
have had psychical experiences of a veridical nature, and are familiar with the power 
of seeing either past or future, or both, as well as events that are happening at a 
distance. 
 
Judging from the well authenticated and numerous cases which have been recorded  -  
not only in this book but elsewhere  -  it becomes evident that this faculty of 
clairvoyance is a natural one, and can be used under natural conditions by perfectly 
natural people. The séance-room is merely a laboratory, a quiet place where suitable 
and harmonious conditions can be assured, unhampered by the noise and distractions 
of the outer world. This precaution is necessary when the student or would-be 
exponent of psychical powers is seeking to study and investigate the subject in an 
intensive manner, with some definite object in view; but such faculties may function 
in every-day life, at any time, through people who have hitherto had no experience 
whatever of seances, nor read any literature on these matters. 
 
The question may be asked  -  What is the use of this “seeing by other eyes”  -  this 
perception of the past or of the future? 
 
To me it seems that as one enlarges one’s range of vision in such ways, one is able to 
see the present in better perspective, and therefore make better use of such 
opportunities as may come to one in one’s life. Surely it is vitally important that one 
should learn to perceive Life as a whole, instead of in incomplete sections? Seeing the 
past and becoming aware of the possibility of seeing people or happenings at a 
distance that cannot be perceived by the physical sight alone  -  should bring us nearer 
to a realisation of the unity of all life  -  the existence of other spheres  -  of hitherto 
unexplored conditions in which dwell those whom we have known and loved in their 
earth lives, and later have mourned, because the physical process called death has 
removed them from the limitations of our physical sight and hearing. 
 
By concentrating on the present only, we undoubtedly limit ourselves as much as a 
pianist would who found himself attempting to interpret a Chopin Prelude on an 
instrument from which the two extreme ends of the keyboard had been cut away. We 
deprive ourselves of the fullness and completeness of life that might be ours. It is this 
sense of incompleteness that often leads to feelings of frustration, and is responsible 
for a great deal of disappointment, perplexity, and depression. 
 

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In my opinion, the most helpful thought that arises from a careful perusal of the 
material in Margery Bazett’s intriguing book, is the hope that it gives of extending our 
vision so that we can to some extent follow the progress of the soul that is departing 
from this material plane, going forth on its journey to another and fuller existence, 
where it will grow and develop in hitherto undreamed of ways. And as it progresses, it 
may communicate some of its acquired wisdom and peace to us, assuming that we are 
ready and willing to open ourselves to such inspiration, and benefit by it. 
 
Margery Bazett cites many cases where the ability to see and hear with the ‘other’ 
eyes or ears has resulted in practical help being given by those on the Other Side who 
can see further into the future than we usually can, or, as it may well be in some cases, 
that because of their greater awareness of the Wholeness of Life, they are able to 
make more accurate deductions from what they see of the past and present, and even 
to give us a timely hint of the conclusions at which they have arrived. Whether we 
choose to benefit by their communications or not rests entirely with ourselves. 
 
Since reading the manuscript of Miss Bazett’s book, one incident occurs to me in 
which I, personally, neglected to avail myself of such help. 
 
Nearly twenty years ago, I bought an old and charming house, situated about fourteen 
miles from London During the first day and night that we spent in it, I was very 
disappointed, because I had become aware of the noise made by the trains on the 
railway close by. I felt sure that I should be unable to study and work in such 
conditions, and I came to the conclusion that I had better move back to the place from 
which I had so recently removed. 
 
On the morning following the evening on which I had come to this decision, I awoke 
suddenly from an unexpectedly good night’s sleep, from which the noises from the 
railway had not disturbed me. It was bright daylight, and standing against the wall 
facing me, I saw the figure of a very beautiful woman, dressed in the costume of  -  I 
should think  -  about two centuries ago. She looked at me in an earnest manner, and 
spreading out her arms against the wall behind her, she said, 
 
‘These dear old walls will protect you.’ 
 
As she spoke, she turned her head away from me, and looked in a westerly direction, 
towards the older wing of the house; then she disappeared. She left me with a feeling 
of comfort and reassurance that intensified as the day progressed, and I felt strongly 
impressed to reverse my decision to leave the house. This I did, and lived in it for 
several very happy years, until certain circumstances arose which influenced me to go 
and live temporarily (as I thought and hoped at the time) on the coast of Kent. As time 
went on, I regret to say that I forgot all about the unknown lady and her message, 
which I had never really understood because I was unaware of any reason why I 
should ever be in need of the protection of the walls of the old house. 
 
After the illness and passing over of my husband, I felt that I could not longer cope 
with the complications and responsibility of having two houses on my hands, and on 
receiving a reasonable offer for the old house through an agent, I accepted it, in spite 
of an inner reluctance to doing so. Everything seemed to point to the advisability of 
accepting, judging from material standpoints. 

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Only two years later, the present war broke out, with its accompanying air-raids, and I 
began to realise exactly how the ‘old walls would protect me’. 
 
I remembered that underneath the house was a complete set of several rooms. Some 
had been bricked up, and none of them had been used for a great number of years. 
Their walls were of a tremendous thickness, built of flint and brick, giving an 
impression of great strength. We had explored these rooms by descending a long 
ladder through a trap door in the old dairy, which we had used as a larder. 
 
On thinking over the position and substance of these underground passages and 
rooms, I realised what an excellent air-raid shelter they would have provided for me 
without alteration of any kind. Also, had I kept possession of the house, I should have 
been living in a much more accessible and convenient locality for my work, at a time 
when travelling difficulties were  -  and still are  -  at their height. Owing to these very 
difficulties and other war complications. I was not able to remain in my Kentish 
house, and had I paid more attention to the message I had heard with my ‘other’ ears, 
I should have found myself still in possession of a very comfortable and congenial 
home, exactly suited to my present needs. 
 
Miss Bazett relates many interesting instances of her ability to use her ‘other’ eyes 
and ears. In my own experience, it has often seemed to me that I have actually ‘seen’ 
or ‘heard’ with my physical eyes or ears, but I am strongly of opinion that even when 
one sees or hears in this definitely objective manner, one is really perceiving through 
the eyes or ears of the etheric body, and that the vision or sound is then transmitted so 
quickly to their physical counterparts that one thinks one has seen or heard through 
the latter. 
 
I do not think that I have ever read a book which contains so much fascinating and 
thought-provoking material as lies within the pages of ‘Beyond the Five Senses.’ 
 
Surely, no one will read it without feeling heartened and encouraged by the many 
proofs it gives of the existence of other and brighter planes that surround this 
somewhat war-weary one through which we are struggling at the present time. There 
are many instances given of cases where the Author had been privileged to witness 
the intense joy felt by those who have recently left their discarded physical bodies, 
and are starting out upon the new life that is opening out to them. She comments on 
the radiance of their appearance, and leaves us with a feeling that we ourselves may 
share some of that happiness which she has revealed to us through the light of her 
own personal experiences. She had opened up a new world for many people who have 
hitherto been unaware of the things that have existed ‘beyond their mortal ken’  -  and 
has brought fresh material for thought, and inspiration to those who are already 
familiar with them. 
 

GLADYS OSBORNE LEONARD 

 

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‘My own feeling about the results of Psychical Research as a 
whole (as far as they have gone) is, that they are not just an 
addition to our existing knowledge, as the discovery of 
Australia was, but require a revolution in our whole way of 
thinking about the world.’ 
 

 

PROFESSOR H H PRICE, NEW COLLEGE, OXFORD

 

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CONTENTS 

 

 

CHAPTER         PAGE 
 
 

AUTHOR’S PREFACE      (i) 

 
 

FORWARD BY MRS OSBORNE LEONARD   (ii) 

 
 
I  INTRODUCTORY       1 
 
 
II  TELEPATHY        4 
 
 
III  THE SENSITIVE AND HIS WORLD     8 
 
 
IV  THE WORKING OF THE INNER SIGHT   11 
 
 
V  SEEING THE DEAD      17 
 
 
VI  LINKS BETWEEN THE LIVING AND THE DEAD  22 
 
 
VII  THE ATMOSPHERE OF OLDEN DAYS   28 
 
 
VIII  INDICATIONS OF OUR LARGER DESTINY   37 
 
 
IX  SEEING INTO THE FUTURE     41 
 
 
X  SEEING AT A DISTANCE     46 
 
 
XI  HEALING AND CLAIRVOYANT DIAGNOSIS  51 
 
 
XII  DEAT H AND THE AFTER-LIFE    57 

 

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I have been allowed by kind permission of 

the Editor of Light to incorporate in this 

volume material previous published in that 

Journal. 

 

 
 
 
 
 

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BEYOND THE FIVE SENSES 

 
 

INTRODUCTORY CHAPTER 

 
 
INVOLVED as we are in the midst of a materialistic age, when many are asking 
whether there may not be another and truer view of the universe, perhaps it is not out 
of place to present this little book, which claims no particular scientific knowledge, yet 
approaches life from the ‘supernormal’ viewpoint, which is as yet unfamiliar to most 
of us. 
 
The importance of what is contained here lies in the fact that it is a record of direct and 
varied experience of a psychic character, touching the fringe of a number of profound 
questions, such as the problem of Time, and Telepathy, and including possibility of 
contact with what we generally speak of as the Life Beyond. 
 
G N M Tyrrell, writing in his early book, Grades of Significance, says, “We accord to 
the universe of our senses the same central importance that our ancestors accorded to 
our plant….  Our dualistic habits of thought make spirit the antithesis of matter, and 
the whispering voice of commonsense suggests that it is the antithesis of true reality as 
well. 
 
There are many who shrink from the suggestion of any real existence beyond the 
world of sense, and many more who habitually live as if there were none…  They are 
afraid of other values, because to know them would mean to have to live by them. 
 
Even those who repudiate materialism on formal philosophical grounds yet live in 
practical accordance with its outlook, and accept a picture of the world which is 
reminiscent of the maps of ancient times. In the centre is placed the continent of the 
world of sense, and all around it is filled in with a vague ‘supernatural’ sea. Uneasy 
glances are cast at this, and the map- maker is given the instructions: ‘Where unknown, 
there place terrors’ (Tyrrell, Grades of Significance). 
 
The old terror that surrounded the gaining of new knowledge is breaking down in our 
world, and the present outlook is more inclined to include life as a whole. The fear of 
these unfamiliar experiences, some of which are related here, is partly accounted for 
by the fact that we isolated them from normal life, terming them magical, bordering on 
the pathological, and so forth. They were tinged with sensationalism. 
 
My idea is to show that these diverse experiences are the result of a perfectly natural 
functioning of a normal mind endowed with what we have come to call ‘psychic 
powers.’ 
 
The psychic powers are embedded in the very fabric of the personality, and function as 
naturally and easily as any other adequately developed faculty. They will probably 
form part of the general mental endowment of the future. 
 

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The person so gifted is not in any sense a magician, and can only reach out a little 
further than his fellow-men when it comes to seeing ahead in time, or diagnosing 
illness, or perceiving what lies beyond the five senses. Yet he, because of his direct 
experience, is able to contribute something towards the penetration of the mysteries 
which surround human existence. 
 
 
To those unacquainted with these things, some of the fragmentary observations in this 
book will seem unimportant; by others who have studied the subject, they will be 
recognised as significant indications of some natural law as yet imperfectly 
understood. 
 
Some points come within the realm of psychological study; others, again, touch upon 
the past, and suggest a line of continuity in the history of mankind, recoverable to a 
limited degree by other ways of exploration than those of recognised historical 
research into the past. 
 
Some again  -  and here we frequently touch upon strong prejudice  -  seem to point to 
the assumption made by many scientists and others, that mind can reach mind after the 
dissolution of the physical body; and, in fact, that the Dead live, and may have some 
touch with, and influence, upon, this earth which they have left. 
 
There will be some readers who will approach this volume from the recognised 
religious standpoint. 
 
Here again, I would refer them to G N M Tyrrell, writing in Time and Tide of 
November 20, 1943. He says there that ‘Religion and Science both rest on experience. 
Science on carefully sifted fact and inference concerning that which appeals to the 
senses; religion on facts of a different order, but facts which are not thereby less 
cogent… The experience (of religion) is no mere psychological craving for 
dependence… but something much deeper, which comes to the most highly developed 
individuals  -  comes, one may say, from ‘on high’. He continues… “The ‘natural’ and 
‘supernatural’ must both be swept away. A new conception must replace them, that of 
a unitary reality, undivided in its essence, and divided only in appearance.” 
 
 
‘It is not, therefore, that there are two intrinsically different worlds, one ‘natural’ and 
the other ‘supernatural’, but that there is one reality with which we make contact in 
different ways, and, so to speak, at different levels  -  in one way, through our physical 
organs of sense; in another way, by opening our personality to an influx of awareness 
which arrives in consciousness through regions of ourselves beyond the conscious 
field. It is these higher contacts with which religion is concerned, and on the existence 
of which it, in fact, depends.” 
 
 
Some modern religious people will go so far with Mr Tyrrell; and by so doing, will 
feel that they are adding to the sum of religious experience, not in any way detracting 
from it. 

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He, I must add, would differentiate between traditional religion and ‘religion in its 
fundament and universal essence.’ 
 
I am anxious to express my own allegiance to this latter view of religion. I have 
touched upon this question of religious outlook, as I believe it to be vitally important 
as presented in the above quotations. 
 
The contents of this book do not necessarily lie within the confines of religion; 
certainly not within its traditional presentation. Yet ‘Religion exists in the world of 
values within; that is why Religion is Mysticism’ (Tyrrell). 
 
I am entirely in accord with this conception of Religion. I repeat ‘Religion exists in the 
world of values within’; and as such, some of the experiences narrated here come 
within its boundaries. 
 
With reference to the so-called Dead  -  ‘How are the dead raised up? And with what 
body do they come?’ ‘Surely, the answer is becoming plainer’ (Tyrell). 
 
As I have already said, some of the incidents described come under the heading of 
Psychology; but there again, Psychology is discovering new regions of personality 
beyond the confines of consciousness; and although these have scarcely begun to be 
explored, there is evidence of modes of acquiring knowledge which appear to have 
escaped the moulding process of evolution. 

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CHAPTER II 

 

TELEPATHY 

 
 
READERS will remember that the value of this book is, that it is a record of personal 
experience. I am not attempting to analyse or explain its contents in any fullness, even 
if I were able, but to make some explanatory suggestions, derived from my close 
association with these experiences. I shall also comment as I go along, and try to 
interpret here and there some of the more obscure examples. 
 
A good number of people in these days will tell of some experience of a psychic 
nature that has come to them; they speak more freely than they used to do, about these 
matters. 
 
The importance of these things, as I see it, is not so much in the quantity of such 
experiences, nor in the number of people to whom they come; but that we should 
regard it in the right light. These things should urge us to ask ourselves of what nature 
is this impact upon our world, from the supernormal source? Does it enlarge our 
knowledge? That is how I regard the matter, and it is in that way that I am trying to 
examine it. 
 
Apart from our touch with a world outside our own, there is coming to light a mass of 
most interesting matter which testifies to the unguessed-at powers of the mind, and as 
such should be of great interest to psychologists, and certainly to ourselves. For we 
shall discover that the limitations under which so many people live, are largely self-
imposed through ignorance; and the discovery of the wider range of our personality 
should produce greater freedom and happiness. 
 
Let us now turn our attention to this question of telepathy, about which everyone has 
heard a good deal. The most familiar instance of telepathy is when two persons write 
to each other simultaneously after a long interval, and their letters cross in the post. 
 
Another instance, rather less common, is when some one at a distance is in acute 
danger, and a friend of his becomes aware of this at the same moment; instances of 
this kind have come to my notice during the present war, between men in the Services. 
 
Only this summer (1944) a naval officer told me of one of his men who came to him in 
great agitation, asking to be put on shore at the first possible opportunity, as he knew 
positively that his home had been wrecked by bombs, and his eldest child killed. No 
information from ordinary sources had reached him, but his impression proved to be 
true. Here is clearly an instance of telepathic impulse between two minds ‘tuned- in’ to 
each other; a tie of affection or a strong emotion gives impetus to the transmission. 
 
Such occurrences form part of our common human experience, and here we step out 
from the familiar world of sense-perception. This first step into the unfamiliar is taken 
by many people, and here we meet on the ground of simple mutual experience. 
 
The  difficulty  that  faces  us  when  we come  to  that  which  lies  beyond  the  world 
of sense 

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is,  that  the  student  is  required  to  go  further  into  this  field  of  the   supernormal,  
leaving 
 behind the simple experience just mentioned. When he has read and investigated for 
some time, he will find himself faced with many complex and puzzling matters, some 
of which are referred to in this book. If he is sufficiently interested to continue his 
search, he will find that he has entered upon a large subject. He will meet with 
incomplete or fragmentary material in the supernormal field, and some of the things 
that he will encounter will strike him as being even trivial. It is very easy to dismiss 
these as having no significance; but they may be the key to some important factor of 
which he is unaware; what is trivial from one point of view may be profoundly 
significant from another; discrimination is called for in this matter of the trivial. 
 
One or two comparatively simple incidents which take one slightly beyond the 
boundary of our sense-experience and are telepathic in nature, have occurred with a 
brother living abroad with whom I have a close tie. 
 
I once had a very strong feeling that he was acutely worried. I saw him seated at a 
table or desk, hurriedly tearing up letters in a state of agitation; I remember that his 
face was flushed. I did not see the room that he was in, nor anything else in it but the 
desk at which he was sitting. A letter which arrived from abroad a few weeks later 
proved that what I had seen at the time was true. 
 
Again, when he was living in a town in the West of England I was surprised one day 
to ‘see’ him walking with his wife in another town far from his home. I did not know 
what town this was, neither did I believe him to be out of his home-town. 
 
I watched them walking down a broad street. I noticed the houses on the right of them, 
but not on the left; they were large, comfortable houses, with a considerable number of 
steps up to the front doors. The day was clear and light. Somehow, that street and the 
houses seemed slightly familiar to me; I felt that I ought to recognise it, but could not. 
It proved later to be a street in Maida Vale, that I knew slightly. 
 
They walked about halfway down the street, which, as I saw it, was a long one; then 
they went up the steps to a house, and I saw them at the front door; I could not at first 
imagine what they were doing there. Then the door opened, and some one appeared 
and spoke; and I became aware of certain people whom I could see clearly; what they 
were talking about also became apparent to me; they were discussing plans for an 
operation in this nursing home. I had not known otherwise of any such event being 
likely, although it proved to be true, with all the details as above.  
 
Another time I heard my brother calling my name loudly ‘Margery, Margery’; there 
was no mistaking the voice and intonation. I was in my room, and the voice appeared 
to come from the passage outside, so distinct was it. I actually opened the door to see 
him, but remembered that he was far away. 
 
By way of contrast in this telepathic field, here is a fragment coming from a complete 
stranger passing in the road. 
 

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A friend and I were picnicking in a Sussex hayfield, having left the car at the side of 
the road. Presently, we heard footsteps approaching, and the tapping of a stick, first on 
the road, and then against the metal part of the car. 
 
At that moment, I became aware of a battlefield scene, and of a young man wearing a 
trench helmet. In a few minutes, an elderly man came and leaned on a gate which led 
into our field. I wondered whether there could be an connection between him and the 
battlefield scene which had flashed into my mind. So I spoke to him, and found that 
he was a blind policeman, retired, and living in the neighbourhood. I asked him if he 
had served in the war, and he said that he was too old, but that a young son of his had 
been killed in the war, and he had a photograph of him at home, in which he wore a 
trench helmet. 
 
I did not tell him of my impression. It seemed strange to me that the mere passing of 
this man along the road should bring to my mind such a scene; unless, possibly, he had 
been thinking of his son at the time. 
 
One characteristic of this mode of perception is, that it breaks upon one anywhere, at 
any time, irrespective of any definite conditions that we can recognise. The accidental 
element in ordinary life obtrudes itself just as unexpectedly; it, too, is probably 
governed by definite laws, though we term it accident. 
 
Sometimes, a definite effort at telepathic communication may be made by A. in one 
part of the country, towards B. in another part at a time agreed upon. A. then 
concentrates upon a simple idea, word, or picture, which he tries to transmit to B. 
 
I have undertaken some such experiments myself, but the successes were not striking. 
In my case, telepathic impressions have been registered more accurately when free 
from deliberate effort to transmit them. I find this conscious effort at telepathic 
experiment very tiring. 
 
On one occasion, about seven different numbers were chosen to be transmitted to me. I 
saw parts of these; as, for instance, a blurred figure which might have been three or 
five. I averaged about three correctly. 
 
On another occasion, a drawing of a simple object was chosen. I seemed to arrive 
correctly at the idea that a simple object had been chosen. I partially saw a curved line 
on the right, which I drew; and a horizontal line above it; I could not see the left side 
of the object. The object was a very simple round vase, and my drawing was the 
nearest that I could get to it. 
 
Another rather perplexing instance of telepathy occurred when I was a guest in a 
doctor’s house. The car, which had gone out containing several people to a distant 
town, did not arrive when the gong sounded for lunch; neither had it returned well on 
in the afternoon. The doctor called me to his study, gave me a comfortable chair, and 
then said, ‘I wonder what has happened to that car; I think you could find out. Try.’ 
 
After a moment or two of concentration, I ‘saw’ with that clairvoyant sight already 
mentioned, this car in a country road, a considerable distance away. The wheel was 

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jacked up, and another car was close at hand, out of which had jumped two young men 
in Air Force uniform, evidently mechanics. 

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The doctor thought this unlikely, saying that they would have towed it to a garage. But 
I held to my original idea, adding that I saw the girl-chauffeur at that moment sitting in 
the car, writing a hurried telegram or telephone message on a piece of paper. 
 
At teatime, the car arrived back in safety; nothing whatever had occurred, but they had 
decided to lunch out. The doctor  remarked to me later, ‘Well, you were very wrong 
that time.’ 
 
I answered, ‘It looks like it, but I saw it all very distinctly.’ 
 
What I had seen occurred the next day in every detail, at exactly the same time. I am 
assuming that in some way, there was telepathic touch between the driver and myself, 
as she was known to me; but I may have seen clairvoyantly what was to occur on the 
following day. 
 
In this connection, those interested might read again the suggestions put forth in J W 
Dunne’s Experiment with Time. 
 
The word Telepathy is somewhat loosely applied in these days as the explanation of 
much that should not come within its province. 
 
On the other hand, if it is a fact that telepathy is ‘the communication of impressions of 
any kind from one mind to another, independently of the recognised channels of sense’ 
(F W H Myers) this is in itself a great achievement. 
 
And Professor Myers suggested that the communication might extend still further, 
‘between incarnate minds and minds unembodied.’ The following strikes me as a 
possible instance of this. 
 
During 1941, I awoke one day with a curious ‘urge’ to go to Bath. There seemed to b 
no reason for this, but during the next few days, the reason became clear, as the city 
was badly blitzed. Before the blitz had actually occurred, I woke in the night to ‘see’ 
an uncle of mine who had died a year previously, and whose widow was still living in 
Bath. He looked troubled, and I wondered what the cause might be. The news from 
Bath explained his anxiety, and I went at once to bring my aunt away to safety. The 
houses were in a dangerous condition, and the authorities were ordering the people to 
leave them; I had arrived only just in time. 
 
In this telepathic region, there may be no very sharp line between impressions from 
the ‘living’ or the ‘dead’; but to those who insist on drawing a sharp line, the fact of 
telepathy from the ‘living’ lady would be considered possible; whereas a mental 
impression from the ‘dead’ husband would be ruled out. 
 
Enough has, perhaps, been said here to show that this subject of Telepathy calls for 
study and thought, as its implications, if true, would be far-reaching. 
 
We might find that we are linked telepathically and clairvoyantly with persons, places, 
and events, more closely than we realise; and that the interlinking of all human life is 
far more extensive than we know. 

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CHAPTER III 

 
 

THE SENSITIVE AND HIS WORLD 

 

 
THERE are many people who, at this present time in particular, are very anxious to 
understand something  -  or more, as the case may be   -  of the various matters 
touched upon in this book. 
 
Quite a number have had experiences which they find difficult to explain, experiences 
which appear to extend beyond the normal happenings of everyday life. 
 
Stephen Graham once wrote that ‘this world affords no more adequate scope for our 
spirits than St Helena did for Napoleon’; and it may be that the spirit of man is 
frequently seeking to break its bounds while still within the flesh-body. 
 
If we consider these powers that take one into the world beyond our senses, we shall 
find that they are extended functions of the spirit, which seeks to exceed the limits 
imposed upon it by the physical body, and by this physical world. 
 
To function in that realm implies an expansion of the self, a pressure of the soul to 
come into its own; and the one who contacts that greater world of supersense comes to 
understand something of the character of this larger self. 
 
It has often been questioned whether to register those things that range outside the 
sense-world is not very fatiguing, and sometimes unbalancing, particularly when the 
person with these perceptions sees very acutely with those inner eyes into sorrow, 
physical pain, and tragedy? Or, when he sees what is coming in the future, or what is 
taking place at a distance? Or again, when he is absorbing another personality in that 
peculiar way that is his own? 
 
Like all hypersensitive people, it is very necessary for him to learn not to prolong a 
touch upon any person or situation to the point when no further good can come to 
either party. 
 
All sympathetic people tend to be drawn too far into situations and emotional 
conditions where they become fatigued; this is, perhaps, the weak side of a very 
excellent quality. It therefore applies equally to the seer of visions, or whatever else 
we choose to term him. 
 
On the other hand, the person touching this realm when healthy- minded and posed 
sees life in its wholeness as he does here, and does not fall into the error of becoming 
negative, and registering unduly those things that belong to the less happy side of life. 
 
Some people who have access to this other plane of experience are rather childish 
characters, and the higher side of their personality is as yet poorly developed; the 
result is, that they interpret very inadequately what is to be experienced there. 

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Unfortunately, it is nearly always this type of person and his experience which is 
singled out for criticism. 

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On this plane of wider consciousness, one should expect joy, expansion of the 
personality; and it is there that the riches of experience are to be felt; it is certainly 
there that inspiration is born. It is there also that we meet with the higher ranges of our 
own personality withdrawing from its outer manifestation, withdrawing also from 
material surroundings, touching the subtler faculties of intuition, reflection, 
meditation, and many other aspects of our deeper self. Dr Osty was right when he said 
that human life had been imprisoned; on this other level, we enable it to extend its 
horizon in accordance with increased powers of apprehension and perception. 
 
Some people are quite interested in considering these extended faculties which 
connect us up with a larger world of experience; but when psychical investigators 
claim that there is evidence to prove that they can make contact beyond the terminus 
of physical death, reaching personalities who have left this earth, a curious reaction 
against this idea sets in. This is, I think, partly due to preconceived ideas which their 
minds are reluctant to abandon, or even to modify, with regard to those who have died. 
 
It has been supposed that it is impossible to contract those who have passed through 
death, except by prayer; and contact with the so-called Dead has been curiously 
confined to the sphere of religion. The world beyond has been pictured as almost 
sanctimonious. People who look at religion more in the wide sense that G N M Tyrrell 
(quoted above) does, will not be faced with this stumbling-block, which borders on the 
artificial. Those who claim that they can contact the Dead present a far more natural 
picture of the After-Life, which is in all probability nearer the truth. 
 
The spiritual world, to the orthodox, must be completely different from life as we have 
known it here; upon that was founded their idea of heaven. In the Middle Ages, this 
heaven was a very artificial one; it has become very much less so in modern times. 
Some exponents, indeed, tend to make that Other Life almost precisely the same as our 
own, thereby erring in the other direction. 
 
We must, however, come back to the testimony of those who have the power to see the 
Dead with the inner sight, by means of direct experience of contact with them. 
 
I believe that there are many people who are ready to accept the possibility of such 
contact with those freed from the physical body, but who will not accept that this must 
be accomplished  -  at present, at any rate  -  by the help of some one possession the 
powers of which I have spoken. 
 
The principle of an intermediary is one with which we are quite familiar in ordinary 
life; as, for instance, using an interpreter in a foreign country; and that is the part that a 
sensitive (or medium) takes. 
 
In all expressions of knowledge, there will be those who expound it in a dignified and 
pleasing manner, and there will be the reverse. We have heard a great deal about the 
unsatisfactory exponents of this branch of knowledge, and forget that there are high-
minded people possessing these powers. 
 
I can myself  recall  at  the  moment  two  graduates  of  London  University,  one  
Professor  of  Music,  and  one writer  of  some  renown, who in addition to their 
unquestioned intellectual  ability,  have  also  the  psychic  equipment  of  which  I  am  

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speaking  in this book. It would be well if we could understand the significance of this 
rare faculty; it stands out aloof from the majority of men, elusive, enticing, puzzling, 
arresting; and withal, gaining increasing recognition. It has been dragged in the mud as 
something disreputable; it has been glorified as something marvellous; and around it, 
there has been a constant babel of voices expressing conflicting opinions; whilst all the 
time, across its threshold have passed the feet of those whom death has called away, 
and who come and go on their mission to our world. 
 
Is it surprising that we have not heard them with any conviction, nor seen them with 
any clear-eyed vision? There are times when this vision is clouded; and this is true of 
the seer as of any one else; times when the sense of adventure  -  the sense that life is 
touched with great issues  -  is temporarily lost. 
 
This is due not to any flatness of existence, but to flatness of the spirit. How terrible a 
thing it is when this is allowed to stand in the way of the brightness that shines from 
that Other World that we long to approach! Then we fail miserably, because of the 
lack of some greatness in us to correspond to that greatness by which we ourselves are 
surrounded. 
 
When the vision of the Life beyond the Veil has blinded us, even for a moment of our 
existence, as it did St Paul of old, we shall never again entirely lose the sense of its 
wonder and its reality. If we cannot at all times penetrate that hidden Life of the 
Unseen, either from lack of vision or of power, yet we can keep our hearts in tune with 
its life, and breathe its atmosphere of immortality. 

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CHAPTER IV 

 

THE WORKING OF THE INNER SIGHT 

 
 
SINCE it is difficult for ordinary people to understand the workings of this ‘other 
sight,’ I think that a few words of explanation might be helpful as an introduction to 
what follows. 
 
In the region of the psychical, there is so much that is outside ordinary experience; yet 
in spite of this unusualness, there are points of similarity with our ordinary mental 
functions. 
 
This faculty of clairvoyant sight is very complex; it is not a single, simply faculty, and 
it has many varieties; this is the opinion of other psychically gifted people. 
 
In this book, I have described how this faculty may be used to see into the past and the 
future, as well as events at a distance. It apprehends through symbols; it has the power 
to diagnose disease, since it appears to see through the physical body; at times, it is 
able to take into its vision a landscape beyond the third-dimensional one that we know 
here. 
 
It can ‘see’ forms  -  persons or animals  -  which appear solid, but one can sometimes 
see through them; and what is more, other objects can be seen through them. 
 
This clairvoyant sight has been classified into two large divisions, that is, the 
subjective and objective. It is not always possible to distinguish between the two, and 
the subjective is very much more common than the other.  It is because the subjective 
vision is so very clear and realistic  -  and here I am including the experience of others 
like myself  -  that it is difficult to distinguish it from the objective. 
 
The latter is a very arresting sight, when seen at all clearly; the subjective visions are 
also most impressive. How these come to the receiver of them, one cannot say 
decisively. I know one sensitive of long experience who says that he does not know 
whether the consciousness of the percipient goes out to find the facts that he sees, or 
whether the facts come to him; this is a very important point that he has raised, and 
after many years of my own experience, I cannot make any more definite statement. 
 
Another curious feature of some of these visions is, that they are very greatly enlarged, 
as for instance, the figure of a man out of all proportion to his normal height; that has 
not very often come into my experience, however. 
 
Others are seen in miniature, as many people have experienced when looking into a 
crystal, sand, or other focussing-points; I have occasionally seen them apart from 
these. Such minute pictures may be vivid, and even animated; and the same psychic 
whom I have just mentioned speaks of their having tried to catch his attention. 
 
I have more experience of this miniature type than of the enlarged; the figures are then 
two or three   inches   in   height,   or  even  smaller.  Usually,  however,  they  give  

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me  the impression  of  being  normal   in   size;   some  figures  seen  in  their  
surroundings  appear  as  
 
though they were some distance away, and therefore relatively smaller. The general 
effect is rather like television. 
 
There is another type of this clairvoyance, which I shall call travelling clairvoyance; 
because when entirely quiescent, one seems to move out of this physical body; in my 
experience, it felt like moving through and out of a tunnel, as a train does. 
 
I have undertaken this experiment only under the direction of an expert in these 
matters; it is not advisable to do so otherwise. 
 
As I experienced it, I found it most exhilarating; and I appeared to visit various parts 
of the globe in a surprisingly short time. 
 
I set forth on these visitations to other parts of the globe from a room that was dimly 
lighted, and at the time of year when the weather was dull and overclouded. 
 
Projecting myself to a distance in space, I was deeply interested to find myself in 
bright sunshine over the Mediterranean, looking down from a considerable height on a 
beautiful city. I particularly noticed a magnificent church, which I could see in detail. I 
knew that I was over the Mediterranean, though how I knew, I could not say; neither 
was I aware of other places en route; actual movement was my only sensation. 
 
 Then the scene changed, and I was in Paris, which I have visited several times; I was 
by this time on ground level, observing with great interest the quarter in which I found 
myself; there again, I could see clearly objects a few feet away from me, though I do 
not remember seeing anything distant; nor can I remember seeing a single person. I 
was not moving in any ordinary way, but rather felt as if I were floating. 
 
The keenest sense of adventure I experienced on another occasion, when after passing 
through the ‘tunnel,’ I arrived, so to speak, in the East; here again, I knew that I was in 
Tibet. I mounted, higher and higher and higher with the same floating movement, until 
rocky landscape was observable everywhere. It was very dark, yet I noticed a few 
stars; and later, as I neared the summit, there was a clear sky, evidently at dawn. 
 
I came upon certain examples that I saw dimly, from the outside only. At one point, I 
seemed to pause for a while, and saw monks emerging from the entrance of their 
temple, which I felt lay some way back within the rock, slanting downwards. These 
monks stood upon a flat projecting rock at a tremendous height and were facing 
eastwards; the ceremony of worship that they were performing had some connection 
with the rising sun. I could see each individual monk clearly; there were about six or 
seven of them. 
 
One temple, I remember, I managed to enter; it was sunk some way below the surface 
of the entrance. This temple was comparatively dark, so it seemed to me, although I 
believe that it was open to the sky from the top at one point; I cannot be absolutely 
certain of that. Deep meditation was taking place within; there were kneeling figures; 
and I was exceedingly interested to see that according to the depth and quality of the 

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meditation, so the figure created and radiated light of a rare character; with some, this 
was very marked. 
 
 
The darkened temple was lit by no lighting save the self-created light of each 
individual person. I remember, too, hearing the deep-toned bells that I believe are used 
in these temples; they, too, varied in depth and fineness of tone, according to the 
quality of the meditation. Some one who knew Tibet was greatly interested in all that I 
had seen of it, and could corroborate the visions. 
 
To return now to the main theme of clairvoyant sight. One of its features  -  seeing into 
the future  -  to many people seems very remarkable; though perhaps since Dunne 
wrote An experiment with Time, even this seems more within our experience. 
 
A very homely example of this ‘seeing ahead’ had to do with a room in which I sleep 
with a friend who has typed this book for me, and with whom I work. 
 
The room was formerly a large kitchen in our house, which was at one time a 
coaching- inn. 
 
We used this basement room for safety during the present war. The furniture and beds 
have been in the same position for some time, and since they were carefully arranged, 
there was no idea of changing them. 
 
One day, I said to this friend, ‘It’s a curious thing, but I see that chest of drawers, that 
table, that chair, removed from that wall, and a bed in their place.’ My friend replied 
that the furniture would not fit that way, and the matter dropped. What actually 
occurred later on was, that the gas- inspector discovered fumes coming back into the 
room from the gas- fire. The matter proved a complicated one to remedy, and 
necessitated the moving of the stove to another part of the room. The bed now stands 
where I ‘saw’ it, and the other furniture has been moved. It is curious that although I 
saw the removal of them, I could not see where they were put; yet they are still in the 
room. 
 
To come now to a matter of importance, which will make some people wonder 
whether the scope of our personal lives is free only within limitations, and the time of 
passing known beforehand. 
 
I have recently visited a gentleman dying from a severe disease, who had never known 
what illness was. I remember a very curious feeling that I experienced on a day that he 
called here whilst motoring, about two years ago. He looked the picture of health, and 
at that time, there was no question of any physical trouble. 
 
A friend received him when he called, and I came in rather later, just as he was getting 
up to leave. He said good-bye and went out, and I remember well the indescribable 
feeling that overcame me. I remarked upon it a little later, adding, ‘It was as though 
the shadow of death had passed through the room.’ I knew that death would shortly 
take him, and it certainly cannot be long now. 
 

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In  a  rather  similar  case, I visited a lady in her country home, and as I was entering 
the garden  gate,  there  met me (psychically) a funeral procession coming from the 
house; it passed  me  as  I  walked  up  to  the  front  door; indeed, I seemed to walk 
through it. It had all  the  atmosphere of a funeral,  although  the  day  was  bright  with  
sunshine,  and  the house   and   front   garden   exceptionally    pleasant.  The lady 
herself opened the door to me, 
 
and I noticed that she was quite well. I enquired after her husband, and she told me 
that he was in bed that day, not feeling very well, but nothing to be anxious about. I 
knew then instantaneously that it was his death that was shortly to take place. I told 
her of this some time after his death, which took place within a year. 
 
In these cases, there would seem to be no reason to think that any one in the Other Life 
had informed me, but that I had seen ‘ahead of time.’ There are other cases where I 
have definitely seen a ‘dead’ person, who has undoubtedly announced some coming 
event. To some people, this may seem an impossibility; yet the ‘living’ are sometimes 
seen at a distance from where they are physically at the time of the vision. 
 
One friend was, I remember, at the other end of England when I ‘saw’ her; I also felt 
her grip my arm, presumably to assure me of her presence, and also to tell me that she 
was all right, as she had gone there on a rather difficult errand. 
 
If, as many believe, the psychic or spiritual body is one that co-exists in this life with 
the physical, and is freed from it at death, then in all probability, it vacates the physical 
from time to time during life; many cases of the ‘living’ being seen thus are on record. 
 
Errors may arise by giving the wrong meaning to what has been seen or heard; that is 
quite common in our ordinary intercourse with one another. 
 
Again, although this peculiar sight of which we are speaking is subject to error, as in 
the case of physical sight, it can at times convey a far truer expression than any words, 
as we use them. 
 
Thought consists very largely of the product of experience, and this subjective sight is 
often very successful in reproducing the mental content of another mind, which is 
derived from its past experience; this seems applicable both in telepathy, and in 
communication with those in the After-State. 
 
Many of the mistakes made by those possessing this inner sight are made owing to the 
difficulty of interpreting the meaning behind the things seen. To arrive at the meaning 
is not by any means easy, since even in ordinary conversation, the presentation of an 
idea and the meaning accompanying it, may be interpreted differently by speaker and 
listener. What an idea or experience may mean to me is not necessarily the same as it 
is to you; and when I try to explain my meaning to you, I do so out of my own 
experience and ability, which may be very different from yours. For instance, an idea 
discussed by two people may, to one, be abstract; to the other, it may appear more 
concrete; to one, general; to the other, particular. To one of these two people, the idea 
may have a wide meaning; to the other, it may appear narrow. To one, the question 
may appear relatively stable; to the other, an ever-shifting problem. Professor Pear 
says that the meaning of anything depends upon who means it, on what occasion, in 

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what connection, and with what purpose it is used; the meaning of any particular thing, 
therefore, is essentially personal in character. A right understanding of the meaning 
attached to any imagery will disclose the personality from whose mind it comes. 
 
I  have  said  enough  to  remind  readers  that  what  we  are  dealing with is very 
complex. The  pictures  that  present  themselves  to  this  inner  sight  often  do  so  
with  great  rapidity; 
 
 they are scarcely registered before they are gone; and they cannot be presented a 
second time, nor recalled. 
 
Take, for instance, the question of a name or a word seen in this way; the right name to 
be conveyed might be BARKER, whereas it comes to the receiver as BARTON. Very 
often, the first letter is correct, since it holds a prominent position; the same may apply 
to the last letter. The middle letters may be seen if they are tall, for the same reason.  
This is not unlike what happens to people in daily life, when recalling names, or 
reading rapidly. 
 
Here is another illustration of what I am trying to explain. 
 
An object may be ‘seen’ and described, but named wrongly; this sounds impossible, 
and I find it hard to make clear what I mean. I believe that certain objects described by 
the sensitive to the listener have this difficulty, that to the former they are presented at 
times without any sensory association such as touch, smell, warmth, cold, etc.; 
whereas to the listener, the object described may be almost poignant with sensory 
accompaniment, because of the associations it has for that particular person. Such an 
error as this may amount almost to a cleavage between these persons, on account of 
the listener failing to recognise this difficulty. 
 
To the ordinary person reading these remarks, these subtleties are puzzling. I would 
remind him that he knows sight only in the physical sense. I have tried, as far as I am 
able, to put on paper these few explanations, to help him to realise that this inner sight 
is quite other than the physical. Many people are very anxious to understand 
something of its nature, and it is for these that I have written. 
 
An illustration may help to make my meaning clear. Let us think of a pencil, a 
paintbrush, a taper, or other objects of similar shape which may be seen by the 
clairvoyant; all these lack the sensory accompaniment, such as touch or physical sight, 
which would enable the ordinary person to differentiate between them. The touch 
would show at once that one object is of wax, and one of wood, clairvoyant sight does 
not necessarily include colour; therefore, it might not be perceived that the pencil was 
brown, and the taper white. To name an object a taper when it should be called a 
pencil, would sound incredible, were it not for the differences between psychic and 
ordinary observation. 
 
A few extracts from a recent correspondence between myself and Professor H H Price 
of Oxford may help readers to understand the intricacies. 
 
I said that supernormal sight was quite other than physical sight; for example, one may 
be sitting in a room in which one can easily see the objects around one, or the pictures 

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on the walls; yet when a vision of a supernormal character becomes visible, the entire 
physical surroundings may completely disappear  -  walls, furniture, pictures, etc  -   
leaving the supernormal vision only. I have often experienced this. 
 
Professor  Price  commented  that  ‘it  appears  theoretically  possible  that the 
apparition would  have  visual  solidity  and  visual  depth;  but the mantelpiece, 
chairs, or what not, would  not  be  seen  along  with  it;  so  that  the entire visual 
field, not merely part of it, would   be   clairvoyantly   perceived.’   He   continued,   
‘something   of  the  kind  appears  in 
 
 
 normal dream-experiences, when we are aware of things having depth, solidity, and 
distance, but are not aware of any part of our physical environment along with them. It 
also happens in what are described as visions, I think….  It seems to me that those 
cases are neither objective nor exactly subjective, according to your classification, but 
fall somewhere between the two extremes.’ 
 
There are occasions on which one sees the ‘apparition’ and the material surroundings 
in the room, such as furniture, etc., simultaneously. On this, Professor Price makes the 
following comment: 
 
‘Two mechanisms (if you can call them mechanisms) must be working at the same 
time, and co-operating in the most curious way; the normal mechanism which works 
by means of light rays, optic nerves, etc., and enables you to see the mantelpiece and 
other physical surroundings; and some entirely different mechanism which has 
presumably nothing physical about it, and which enables you to see the deceased 
person. It is strange that the results of the processes (which must themselves 
presumably be very different) should blend so harmoniously into a single scene or 
vision.’ 
 
Commenting upon the visionary figure or apparition, Professor Price wrote: ‘Blacking 
out the vision of one eye with the finger ought not to make any difference. One would 
think that the figure would be equally visible, even if both eyes were shut. This should 
certainly be so, if some entirely different organ is involved, such as the Third Eye of 
the occultists.’ 
 
It is undoubtedly this ‘Third Eye which functions in the case of the inner sight; I have 
myself seen this Third Eye situated, roughly, between the two normal eyes, on the 
faces of psychically endowed people.’ 
 
Professor Price wrote that he was ‘greatly interested to hear that the supernormal light 
casts no shadow.’ His final remarks were: ‘If I am right, it is not surprising that people 
find it so difficult to accept them (that is, these supernormal phenomena) nor is it 
surprising that the people who find it most difficult are precisely the most highly-
educated, who have the widest acquaintance with the field of existing knowledge, and 
with the methods by which it has been acquired. In a sense, they have more to lose 
than other people.’ 

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CHAPTER V 

 

SEEING THE DEAD 

 
THERE have been attempts recently by various people to say a little more regarding 
the After-Life, for the reassurance of those whom the war has bereaved. 
 
One of the most noticeable of these is Canon W H Elliott, whose special addresses in 
the Chapel Royal for the war-bereaved have touched on the After- Life in terms that 
were both simple and natural, maintaining that those who had died could see and know 
the state of mind of those who missed their presence here. He urged upon them all the 
necessity of realising the re-birth into new life of those killed in war; and he begged 
those who sorrowed to tune their minds to that truer conception, for the sake of those 
who had passed through death. All that he said was strikingly new and stimulating, 
and must have travelled far beyond his immediate hearers. 
 
There must be a considerable number of those fallen in this war who have shown 
themselves to their own people, sometimes conveying an idea with their appearance. I 
personally know mothers and wives to whom this has happened. Sometimes, they have 
shown themselves through a third person, as in the following case. 
 
I recall a boy  -  an airman  -  whose parents I knew very slightly. As I walked through 
their beautiful garden to the front door one day, I ‘saw’ this boy  -  whom I did not 
know in life  -  and he welcomed me, conveying the impression, ‘Do come and see and 
enjoy this garden.’ I told his mother this, and she said, ‘That is exactly like Roger; he 
used to ask strangers looking over the hedge to come in and look round, so anxious 
was he that everyone should enjoy the garden.’ His father added to the mother’s 
remark, that Roger had done so much of the original planning of the garden. 
 
I am convinced that the dead are not far from us. I am constantly aware of their 
presence, not as ghostly figures, but as real living, vital personalities. The naturalness 
of becoming aware of them is, perhaps, shown in this little incident. 
 
I was walking up an down a beautiful lawn, talking to a fellow- guest, a stranger, when 
that sense of another presence came to me. A man seemed to be thinking of this lady, 
and I asked if her husband had died. She replied ‘Yes’. In a flash, he conveyed to me 
that his wife would herself pass on very suddenly within a week or two, and he wanted 
her to keep an anniversary that was just coming; it would be the last. I spoke to her of 
this and she told me that the anniversary of their wedding day was near. I did not 
speak of her coming death, or of the anniversary being the last. She said, ‘I am glad 
that my husband wants me to keep this day; we always kept it, but since his death, I 
have not done so; and to my surprise, she added, ‘I shall keep this one, as it will give 
him pleasure; I think it will be my last.’ Ten days or so afterwards, when this lady had 
left the house and gone home, a wire came, announcing her sudden death from 
ptomaine poisoning. 
 
Curiously enough , whilst walking in the garden at home, this same ‘awareness’ of the 
presence of another came about in the following way. 
 

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A car had just driven in, with a clergyman and his wife whom I knew; on this 
occasion, they brought with them a girl in the early twenties whom I had not met 
before. It was during tea in the garden that I first became conscious of a very striking 
personality close behind the clergyman; he seemed to be aware of us and our talk, and 
the expression on his face was one of keen interest. I noticed a curious little deformity, 
due, no doubt, to an accident in early life. I took the girl round the garden, and could 
not refrain from saying to her, ‘You are terribly troubled; you have lost somebody 
younger than yourself? He must have died in hospital, and at that time was strangely 
irritated by the sound of a large clock on a building facing his window. There walks 
with us a man whom I saw at teatime, and I feel that he is anxious to give you comfort, 
and that he knows you and this young man very well. He conveys to me the idea that 
this young man  -  your brother, I gather  -  was taken from this life very suddenly, and 
that he did not wish to go. The elder man seems to have understood boys and young 
men very well. i believe he wishes to say that in this matter, he will help that brother 
of yours.’ 
 
All this was peculiarly apt and correct, she told me; it was complete in its message and 
description, and she was tremendously impressed by it. I ought to add that there was 
no outward sign of trouble about her, and no reference had been made to it. 
 
I remember, when staying in a doctor’s house, an old lady, also staying there; she used 
to play the piano beautifully. When we sat in the large drawing-room in the evening, I 
frequently saw quite close to her an archdeacon, whom I always imagined to have 
been her husband. One day, I had the opportunity of speaking to her alone, and 
described the man who wore gaiters and apron. She said, ‘No, that is not my husband, 
but it is Archdeacon X, who was a great friend of us both. I am glad to think that he is 
sometimes near me.’ 
 
Here is another instance of the nearness of the ‘dead’ to the ‘living.’ 
 
During these years of war, we have been collecting clothing for those whose homes 
have been bombed; in this connection, a lady called one day, and we were talking 
together in the drawing- room; my friend was also present. 
 
While the conversation passed between those two, my ‘other eyes’ were arrested by 
the following: Behind the lady (who was facing me) stood a woman with a beautiful 
figure and an equally beautiful face, the head surrounded with a mass of curls, eyes 
blue, bright with gaiety, and a lovely pink and white complexion. She leaned over the 
seated figure, peeping, as it were, over the left shoulder, indicating on her own dress 
something that hung at the neck, to which she was calling attention. 
 
I had already noticed a very fine ring on the living lady’s finger  -  a ring that I had 
noticed on first meeting her. On the previous occasion, I was struck not only by the 
beauty of the ring, but by the great significance which I felt attached to it. 
 
Rather to my surprise, and unexpectedly, the seated lady said to me, ‘Sometimes, I am 
able to help people in an unusual way.’ I replied simply, ‘So am i.’ She added, ‘I think 
my sister realises that I am here today.’ I said to her, ‘Had your sister a mass of lovely 
curly hair? Was she a fascinating creature, and so gay?’ she answered, ‘You mean a 
sister who died, whom I called Sweetheart?’ I said ‘Yes.’ 

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This was our first reference to anything of the kind. I went on to say, ‘She seemed to 
be calling attention to something hanging round the neck.’ Our visitor put her hand 
insider her dress, and produced, suspended from a little cord, a rather unusual pendant, 
bought, she said, in California. I, glancing at it, remarked, ‘Surely, that is a symbol of 
unity.’ She replied, ‘That is what my sister always said about it.’ she added, ‘Both that 
and the ring were bought on her last birthday; I gave her the ring, she gave me the 
pendant, saying, ‘These are symbols of our love.’ 
 
The lady went on to tell me how, before an operation from which her sister did not 
recover, she asked that the ring should be fetched and put upon her finger, remarking, 
‘If I lose this ring, I shall soon lose my body.’ Before the operation, the nurse found 
the ring lying loose in the blanket, and gave it into the other sister’s care. 
 
Twenty- fours before she died, the sick woman asked her sister not to be hurt by what 
she was going to say. ‘You know, don’t you, that your love is holding me here, and 
that I have to go? Will you withdraw for twenty-four hours the desire to hold me here, 
so that I may be free to go? She also asked that when she went, the living sister would 
take no initiative in trying to reach her, but would wait till she made a sign. 
 
After ten days, the sister heard her call, and saw her, since when she has been in 
constant touch with her, in the same natural and spontaneous way. She did not regain 
consciousness after the operation, save for a few seconds, when she gazed at her sister, 
her face radiant; it was her sign of farewell, though she could not speak. Her sister had 
been reading aloud portions of the Gitanjali by Tagore, believing that it might reach 
the subconscious mind of the dying woman, and had read these words: ‘Let all my life 
take its voyage to its eternal home, with one salutation to thee.’ 
 
After the sister had left us, that same evening there came to me the words, ‘See page 
63 of Gitanjali,’ where I read, ‘And there comes the evening over the lonely meadows 
deserted by herds, through trackless paths, carrying cool draughts of peace from the 
western ocean of rest. And there, where spreads the infinite sky for the soul to take her 
flight in, reigns the stainless white radiance. There is no day nor night, no form nor 
colour, and never, never a word.’ This quotation, I understood, was to be sent to her 
sister. 
 
What I have just described shows a person prepared in some way for the last adventure 
of death, and helped by the intuitive understanding of her sister. 
 
Unfortunately, there are very many who have none of the help or preparation. 
 
There comes to my mind a dying woman whom Sir Oliver Lodge wired me to go and 
see, if possible. 
 
Her  end  was  very  near,  yet  her  mind  was  acutely alert. She questioned me on 
many things  concerning  that  life  for  which  she was bound, and I spoke of what I 
knew, reassuring her. She  had  been  brought  up  in  the  old  school  of  religious 
thought, and I shall  never  forget  her  questions,  asked  under  great  difficulty  on  
account of extreme heart-weakness,    and   the   hungry   way   in   which   she   
absorbed   all   that   I   said.   We 

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 remained thus, questioning and answering for an hour and a half, for it seemed as if 
she could not let me go. I heard soon afterwards that she had died in great peace. 
 
My own mother was another example; her extreme sensitiveness to suggestion and 
mental help was most striking. She appeared, as I thought, to fear death, though she 
said no word about it. 
 
I remember suggesting that she should quietly and confidently commit herself to that 
great life- force which would carry her along, if she did not resist or fear; to relax to it, 
not to struggle against it, was the secret, and to have perfect confidence. Life itself 
would take us along with it, and we had merely to trust to its guidance; there was 
nothing to fear in death itself, and life lay beyond the veil. In this strain I spoke quietly 
and reassuringly for some time, and watched the change in her face from anxiety to 
peace. 
 
I was ill at the time of visiting her, and had to return home, and to bed. Shortly before 
she died, a ‘voice’ told me that she was nearly gone; and about an hour after her death, 
I ‘saw’ her for a few seconds at the foot of my bed. She was radiant, and looked many 
years younger; she smiled at me, and then passed on her way. 
 
I am of opinion that even during unconsciousness or semi-consciousness, the mind and 
spirit of a dying person may reach out and respond in some measure to those who 
watch. 
 
One whom I remember well was practically unconscious when I sat with her, and the 
nurse assured me that she was beyond any external stimulus. I felt that appearances 
were deceptive, and asked that I might be left alone with her. 
 
No friend or relative had come to see her at the end of her earthly journey; she was a 
proud and aristocratic figure of the old school, and I felt that she was aware of her 
loneliness, even in her unconscious condition. I spoke to her in simple words, and 
assured her that only fundamental things were of real importance now, and that upon 
these she could rest secure. I reminded her that her husband must be anticipating her 
presence on the Other Side, and that she should go out with joy. 
 
Before leaving her, I made the sign of the Cross upon her forehead, and repeated the 
words, ‘The peace of God which passeth all understanding, keep your heart and mind 
in the knowledge and love of God!’ 
 
Finally, although I was virtually a stranger to her, I kissed her; and to my 
astonishment, her almost lifeless hands gripped mine firmly and with purpose. That I 
had reached her inner life, I was assured, though the nurse was still of opinion that her 
patient was far beyond any human touch. 
 
After  her  death,  I  was  sitting in the Nursing Home with the matron, shortly before 
the arrival  of  the  coffin.  While  the  usual preparations were being made upstairs, I 
‘saw’ through  the  open  door  of  the  room  in  which we were, a tall shadowy figure 
surrounded by  light  slowly  descending  the  staircase;  the  face  was  clearly  

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recognisable.  I spoke to her   silently  as  she  approached,  bidding  her  farewell,  and  
reminding  her  once  more  that 
 
 
what was taking place above was concerned only with the physical, and that she 
herself was free. 
 
She looked at me very steadily, and then vanished. 

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CHAPTER VI 

 

LINKS BETWEEN THE LIVING AND THE DEAD 

 
 
 
IN the last  chapter, I have tried to show how natural and spontaneous are these 
appearances of the Dead. I have also expressed the opinion that we should help those 
who are about to pass through the experience of death. 
 
I would go further, and say that every adult person should consider the significance of 
this event as part of his philosophy of life, not shunning the thought of it until the 
actual experience has to be faced. 
 
There is to-day a great deal more interest concerning those who have ‘passed over’; 
we are less content to leave them, as though responsibility concerning them were 
beyond our control. 
 
Many of the living and the dead are maintaining intercourse by prayer, by thought, 
sometimes by a definite effort at communication; and the idea that this is wrong seems 
no longer to have much hold upon the mind. I can testify that this is so, as a great 
number of people write to me for help in making this contact. They write from various 
parts of the world, and from my experience of hundreds of such people, ever since the 
last war, there is very little doubt that communication between the two states of 
existence does take place. 
 
I hope shortly to publish records of some of these, by kind permission of those 
concerned. 
 
I believe that if we had the eyes to see, and the faith to believe, we should know that 
the ‘cloud of witnesses’  -  the idea of which is familiar to us  -  embodies a great truth, 
namely, that there is no hard and fast line between those whom we term the ‘living’ 
and the ‘dead.’ 
 
I am sure that many people attribute inspiration, help in moments of crisis, insight into 
some puzzling problem, to the fact that those who have gone before us, and who in all 
probability see further than we do, can still be in touch with us. 
 
It would seem to me a false idea to suppose, as I have heard people state, that those 
who passed on a considerable time ago must necessarily be so spiritually engrossed in 
that other world that they cannot possibly contact us here. One might as well say that a 
highly evolved personality on earth is far too absorbed in his spiritual reflections to 
take notice of any lesser individual. The very reverse is the case; spiritual development 
does not entail being out of touch with those on earth, though it may involve the 
shedding of minor interests that are associated with our life here. 
 
For all we know, there may be many who have died long ago, who are much 
concerned with our period of social, historical, or religious evolution and development 
in this earth-life, collectively and individually. 
 

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An instance of this was experienced by me in an old Quaker Meeting House in Sussex, 
where Friends had met for worship through several centuries. 
 
 
One Sunday morning, I was listening to a Friend who was speaking with sincerity and 
simplicity, when I noticed immediately behind him a very tall Quaker of such 
outstanding force of personality, that he seemed to pervade the whole assembly. His 
face was weather beaten and lean; it gave the impression of strength won through 
suffering; he had evidently been a man of persevering effort and endurance. He wore 
the Quaker garb of a past age, and yet seemed to be inspiring the present speaker, who 
was a man of high quality of character. 
 
Another man, wearing the tall hat of the Quakers of old, was also visible to me. An 
elderly woman was seated near the speaker, also belonging to a bygone age; she 
brought a feeling of serenity and peace. In fact, the whole atmosphere of that Meeting 
House was full of quiet power, created primarily, I felt, by persons long since gone, 
yet whose spirits came and went amongst the present worshippers. 
 
George Fox had been often there, and a special chair in which he had sat is still to be 
seen in its place. 
 
I have a pleasing picture in my mind of that other old Meeting House particularly 
associated with George Fox; I refer to Jordans. It is situated in a quiet and picturesque 
spot, far away from all sound of modern traffic. 
 
One Sunday morning, I sat among the worshippers there, and I remember listening to 
an elderly man whose name was wellknown in the Society of Friends; he was seated 
where the Elders usually gather. His face bore traces of recent suffering; his eyes were 
tired; but when he raised them, they held that light which is peculiar to those who have 
absorbed the Quaker teaching through generations. 
 
After a prolonged silence, he rose quietly, and led the Meeting in prayer; his words 
were as if inspired. 
 
Whilst he was still seated, I had ‘seen’ close beside him the spirit-form of an elderly 
woman, of much the same build as himself. Her face was shining with that inner light, 
and her eyes, too, had that penetrating spiritual glance. She remained close beside him 
whilst he prayed, and I was convinced at the time that his prayer was inspired by that 
spiritual presence. 
 
As we stood in little groups outside the building later, I mentioned this incident to a 
member of an old Quaker family. She immediately recognised the woman as the 
Elder’s beloved sister who had recently died. 
 
Would not this vision suggest that many of the living are inspired by both the spirit 
and the words of those whom we term ‘dead’? 
 
Now let us look at a lighter aspect of the same idea; for psychic perception ranges over 
all phases of experience; since it is associated with life and persons, that is what we 
should expect. 

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Here are some instances of its functioning at several concerts at which I was present, 
and during a play in a theatre at two of the concerts and at the theatre, there was a kind 
of poignancy traceable; the remaining one has a touch of piquancy. 
 
At one concert, the platform was occupied by more than one artist, the central figure 
being best known to the audience; it was, however, to the pianist that my attention was 
chiefly drawn. As she played, there came on the scene the psychic figure of a man; he 
carried himself well, and appeared in full evening dress, the waistcoat cut very low. 
He might have been a man of thirty- five or forty; he was certainly a person of 
distinction. 
 
At the back of the stage hung a heavy plain coloured curtain which showed up this 
man very distinctly. 
 
He stood immediately behind the piano, a little to the side, one hand rested lightly on 
some large object with which he was familiar in come other setting. The hands were 
remarkably white, and beautifully shaped; his movements were slow and deliberate, 
his touch particularly gentle. He was himself exceedingly musical, and was watching 
the pianist with rapt interest. 
 
There was an intimate link between these two, one that was recognised by them both, 
yet one that had never been expressed in words. His link was more than one of musical 
interest; it was based upon a deep regard, out of which might spring a real and 
enduring affection. The restraint of the man was very marked, as if he had deliberately 
trained himself to hid this. It would seem that he dared not deflect her attention from 
her musical nature. And how easily it was swayed by passionate emotion. 
 
E seemed to have known her family many years ago, when they were in rather 
impoverished circumstances, and the family was not a small one. I saw in a flash a big 
room with the family group, early Victorian in every sense, and this daughter with a 
rather striking profile, and a proud tilt of the head. 
 
I had almost forgotten the music for the moment; she was now playing, with apparent 
feeling, ‘The Gentle Maid’. For one moment, the two seemed intimately united, and I 
felt that she, too, must be seeing in memory scenes from their past lives. At that point I 
left them, enwrapped by the spell that held them both for a few fleeting moments. 
 
Another scene concerns a pianist whose movements I watched with absorbed interest. 
As his small white hands moved lightly over the notes, his head sank deep into his 
chest, so that he almost embraced the keyboard. 
 
What memories flitted before his mind/ there seemed to appear before my vision a 
picture of a small boy of some ten or eleven years or less, whose love of music took 
him frequently in and out of an old cathedral church; so old, that its walls were 
crumbling beneath the centuries, blackened with the smoke of many chimneys. At the 
west entrance was a low narrow rounded archway, under which one must bend the 

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head to enter; above it was a large plain window. Past the doorway ran a narrow street, 
three or four feet wide, curving abruptly and disappearing. 
 
Within  the  church,  one  looked  far  long  a  narrow  low  side-aisle; the old wooden 
seats had   beautifully   carved   ends   shaped   somewhat   like   a  mitre,  and  as  
they  figured  one 
 
behind the other, they gave the strange impression of soldiers lined up in single file. At 
the extreme end, the figures of two men in miniature moved and spoke with one 
another, one an older and taller man. 
 
Close by this old cathedral ran a river; the city was dark and ill- lighted, as if buried in 
a remote past. This city was in some distant part of Europe, as unlike the musician’s 
present surroundings as could be imagined. 
 
Had his mind run over, as he played, the times when he, perhaps, stole into that dimly-
lighted church to hear the organ? And was his home within sound of the cathedral 
bells? Was he recalling hs boyhood and his youth? For at one moment of his playing, 
his whole face changed, his back straightened, and he took on the appearance of a 
youth. 
 
A light hand rested for a second upon his shoulder, and the spirit- form of an elderly 
lady in black bent slightly towards him, as he played a sonata which was surely 
familiar to them both, and recalled the budding genius of the youth she loved. 
 
Their hands and fingers were alike, and she would spend many an hour in making the 
finest lacework; she, too, had the artist’s gift of creation. There was a deep attachment 
between the mother and son, and a sense of loneliness and remoteness from a much-
loved home and country pervaded the man as he now appeared. 
 
One thing united the various stages of his life, and that was his intense passion for 
music. The other memories might come and go, but this lifelong devotion to his art 
would remain with him to the end. 
 
The next vision was from a box in a large crowded theatre, where a popular play was 
in progress. I knew only one of the actors, and nothing of his personal history. 
 
Although the play was being magnificently acted, I was aware that the cast was 
sharply divided into two opposing factions, at variance with each other. This could not 
have been detected in any other way than by psychic intuition; and when I went to the 
green room later, my actor- friend told me that this division in their company was only 
too true. 
 
A more interesting incident was the psychic vision of a young girl on the stage at 
intervals during the play; she was watching the performance with the keenest interest. 
There was a look of extreme delicacy about her, and when I mentioned this to the 
actor, he was deeply moved. She had been, he told me, his leading lady, and was 
greatly beloved by the whole company. She had remained with them as long as was 
possible, but had recently died from a lingering illness. 
 

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As I saw her, she was no ghostlike apparition, but was following the play and the 
performance of each actor with critical appreciation. 
 
The actor to whom I spoke took the idea of such appearances quite naturally, so I had 
no hesitation in questioning him about the girl whom I had seen. 
 
 
 
 
At the third concert, the sole performer was an elderly pianist of some renown; he was 
playing on this occasion the Sonata in B flat minor, by Chopin. 
 
During the Scherzo movement, I saw with the inner vision a very beautiful figure of a 
young woman standing immediately behind him, wearing an old- fashioned dress 
which reached to her feet. The low-cut bodice was perfectly plain, and made in 
material of fine texture, the skirt falling around her in billowy folds; it was of light 
colouring, and I saw no pattern upon it, her fine golden hair hung in ringlets around 
her long and slender neck. Her hands were on her hips, with the fingers pointing 
backwards; her chest was thrust forward, as though she were studying a pose in 
deportment. She was stepping lightly, pointing her toes, her head turned over her left 
shoulder in the direction of the pianist. 
 
During the Funeral March, she sank into an armchair, her head drooping, and her 
whole pose full of dejection. Upon her lap lay a profusion of flowers untied and loose. 
There seemed to have been a close association between these two at some time. I do 
not know in what relation they stood to each other; possibly, she had been a favourite 
pupil, or a dancer whose career he had followed with interest. 
 
Some critics might say that with regard to the three pianists, they might have been 
remembering what I perceived, and that I picked up these memories. No definite 
pronouncement can be made, because there are so many examples which would fit 
either case, appearances of the dead or memories of the living. 
 
We must remember that where those who have passed on are concerned, the memory 
of them is sometimes intensely vivid, and that a sensitive can ‘see’ other peoples’ 
memories exteriorized. 
 
It would be better, therefore, not to state with too great certainty which category these 
examples fall into. 
 
I remember a conversation which I had with Miss Moberly (joint authoress of An 
Adventure
) in which she remarked, ‘There is a very fine line indeed between our 
ordinary normal experience and that strange psychic perception which takes one into a 
quite other field.’ I answered, ‘But how can we know for certain of which order these 
things are?’ to which she replied, ‘Do you not think that we who have this ‘other’ 
perception have at the same time some acute sense which accompanies it, and which 
becomes more reliable as experience grows? In fact this kind of discrimination can be 
trained.’ 
 

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The whole of my experience in the psychic field goes to show that this is so. 
Throughout my work, I have found myself increasingly able to make this 
discrimination. In my own particular case, discernment is necessary to discover 
whether thoughts and ideas that I am receiving from a communicator on the Other 
Side are consistent throughout. It is possible that in the process of transmission, certain 
intrusions emanating from my own mind may creep in. 
 
The  matter  is  not  a  simple  one.  Even  in  ordinary conversation, it is not easy to 
draw sharp   lines   of   demarcation   between  the  ideas  presented  by  different  
people.  All  of  us 
 
are very open to suggestion in our intercourse, and our ideas certainly impinge one 
upon another. 
 
If a strongly integrated and concentrated personality is communicating  -  whether in 
ordinary conversation or as a spirit-communicator  -  his ideas are more likely to keep 
in line and reach the recipient unmixed; provided that a sympathetic atmosphere is 
created through which ideas may flow. 
 
The ‘fine line’ discussed with Miss Moberly may be largely a matter of tuning- in to 
other vibrations, and the adjustment that has to be made needs to be very exact. Any 
failure here makes for confusion and error. It may be impossible to describe how one 
steps across that ‘fine line’; and when I pressed Miss Moberly further, and even 
offered some kind of explanation of my own, her final remark was ‘When we know all 
there is to know about higher mathematics, we can, perhaps, proffer an explanation.’ 
 
My psychic experiences at Versailles (related in the following chapter) coincided with 
Miss Moberly’s in some degree, though I visited it many years after she had done so, 
and at a different time of year. 
 
It appears that she was there when the place was highly charged with a psychic replica 
of the past. 
 
Why places and houses re-awaken, as it were, to the call of a past age, or past personal 
history, I do not know; but I have stayed in old houses where this undoubtedly seemed 
to occur. 
 
When we were discussing the phenomena to be seen at Versailles, she and I both 
remarked upon the strange feeling that accompanied the swift change of scene from 
present surroundings to those of a bygone time. 
 
Every time I experience this, I feel this strangeness in the process of shifting from the 
present age to other earlier times and periods in history. 
 
This sense of strangeness lies, I think, in the contrast of outward setting, such as dress 
and surrounding, rather than in the experience itself. 

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CHAPTER VII 

 
 

THE ATMOSPHERE OF OLDEN DAYS 

 
 
 
THE psychic faculty renders its possessor very sensitive to atmosphere everywhere, 
whether connected with individual people, buildings, or localities; he can even feel the 
atmosphere associated with any particular object. The significance of this is far-
reaching. I have myself been in houses which made a strong appeal, and in others 
where the feeling was the very reverse. 
 
In a place where history has been made throughout the centuries, one might expect to 
become aware of something of its story, and of scenes that are long since over. In 
doing so, one stands, as it were, between two points in time, being fully conscious of 
the present moment, yet reaching backwards in awareness of the past. This 
simultaneous existence in two periods of time will always be to me an extraordinary 
experience, alive with interest and full of mystery. 
 
In many of our English abbeys and old churches, scenes from the past have been 
perceived by those living to-day; in some cases, it is possible to find verification of 
what is seen, although much is impossible to trace, owing to the comparative scarcity 
of written history available to us, and to the fact that many events of the past have 
never been recorded at all. 
 
I was once staying in a house which had formed part of the chapel of an old abbey, the 
dining- room being near where the altar had stood; the religious atmosphere still 
pervaded that portion of the building. 
 
In the rough fields outside, there was practically nothing to be seen that suggested 
buildings; the owner and I wandered round the grounds one evening in the failing 
light, and I with my inner sight tried to recapture something of the abbey as it used to 
be. 
 
Straight ahead of us, it looked to me as if there had originally been a large burial-
place, with graves here and there; though to ordinary vision, nothing but rough grass 
was perceptible. 
 
Some distance further on, I could see with my natural eyes a long, high thick hedge; 
this was only just visible in the now deepening twilight. 
 
With ‘other eyes’ I saw through the hedge the outline of a long, large building, 
showing white in contrast with the darkness; it ran exactly parallel with the hedge. 
 
I should have liked to walk into that building as I saw it then, but it was impossible to 
penetrate the hedge, and the way round was long, and difficult to find in the quickly 
growing darkness. 
 

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We came back through a part of the grounds which was then a cultivated garden, and I 
remember  remarking  that  we  were  passing  under  a  high archway, of brick, not 
stone; it was   very   crumbled   and  old,  and  partially  demolished,  quite  invisible  
to  ordinary  sight. 
 
 
To me, it had the appearance of forming part of a very high building, as I could see 
fragments of a wall continued above. Figures were to be seen here and there, though I 
heard no spoken word. 
 
After my return to my own home a day or two later, I had a vision of a monk, who 
spoke, saying, ‘Go to the city of St Cuthbert.’ I had then no idea of what city this 
might be, but on looking up a reference book, discovered it to be Durham. I have 
never visited that city, and am not aware of its having any connection with the abbey. I 
shall hope to discover some day that there was some connection between these two 
monasteries. 
 
Not far from my home is a pleasant old manor house, which also stands upon the site 
of an ancient monastic building. On one occasion, when visiting the present owner for 
the first time, we were having tea with her in a lounge hall, when I saw the etheric 
form of a man who was smiling pleasantly, as if in welcome. I described him to the 
lady, who said, ‘That must be my husband; he died a few years ago, quite suddenly, in 
this hall.’ She said that he had always had such a pleasant welcome for newcomers. 
 
From the hall, a door stood open into an adjoining room, and shortly afterwards, 
through the opening, I saw three psychic figures approaching  -  one a very aged monk 
with bent form, supported on either side by younger brethren. These figures were 
apparently coming from the room which I was told had been the refectory in old days. 
The house had been a rest house for the aged and inform monks connected with a 
distant monastery. 
 
Through the garden ran a little stream, and by the side of it I noticed a small building; 
this latter was not normally to be seen, and was evidently connected with the past; 
there was an atmosphere of great peace in the whole surroundings. 
 
In connection with an old abbey in the west, I was fortunate in gaining admission to 
the ruins by moonlight, though the time granted was very restricted. 
 
My friend and I stood in the centre of the nave, facing the east end. All that one could 
see with one’s normal eyes was the grass which covered the whole nave illuminated 
by the moonlight, and the ruined outer walls. 
 
Turning into a small enclosure, I could ‘see’ what must have been the reader’s seat in 
the refectory; as I saw it, it was occupied by a monk who was reading aloud to the 
brethren during a meal, as was the custom in those days. I could distinguish quite 
fifteen or twenty seated figures. 
 
Moving on across the grass towards another enclosure, there could be seen a few 
spirit- forms of aged and infirm monks; the portion of ground upon which we were 
entering was the infirmary, as I learned later. In yet another part of the grounds, we 

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reached what was apparently a chapel, although I could only surmise this from the 
devotional atmosphere which pervaded it; there were figures seated along a low wall, 
whether in contemplation or listening to a homily, there was nothing to indicate. 
 
All these glimpses into the past suggested the daily life of an Order whose influence 
could still be felt there. 
 
The ruins of another well-known abbey were rich in visions of the past; these also I 
saw first by moonlight, in company with other people, only two of whom had, like 
myself, never been there before. One of these was also clairvoyant, and we compared 
notes afterwards as to what we had seen. 
 
My first psychic impression after entering the precincts was of small wattled huts, 
where now is only grass; these could be clearly seen dotted about, fairly close to each 
other in a group. I described this to the friend who was conducting us, and was told 
that these huts formed the earliest shelter for the monks who first settled there. 
 
Towards the south were to be seen (to normal sight) some steps leading down to a 
side-chapel; at the top of these steps was the psychic form of a hunchbacked dwarf in 
the dress of a  jester of the Middle Ages; he was moving swiftly about, gesticulating, 
his face animated with amusement; he appeared as though he noticed us. 
 
I confess that a jester was the last person that I should have expected to meet with in 
the abbey precincts; I associated jesters only with Court life, and do not know whether 
they ever had any connection with monastic establishments. 
 
Descending these steps, we found ourselves in a small chapel, of which just the bare 
walls were visible to ordinary sight; looking around, I was aware of a  very ancient 
shrine upon the wall, the exact size and position of which I could clearly perceive. 
 
I saw in the same chapel the ghostly form of a monk wearing a white habit, who stood 
with outstretched arms barring the way to a small alcove in the south wall; we did not 
enter it then, but discovered the next day that the alcove contained a well. Normal 
sight showed us a curious marking on the wall near the well, roughly shaped like the 
capital letter H. The same mark was to be seen on the doorway of a ruined building at 
some little distance from the abbey; we could not discover the significance or 
connection (if any) between these two marks.  
 
When the monk barred the way, it seemed as if he might be guarding some treasure or 
secret; one could not help wondering whether an underground passage connected the 
two buildings, but I have never been able to verify this. 
 
Let us now leave these English abbeys, and visit French soil, looking at the castles of 
Malmaison and Versailles, connected with Napoleon and Louis 14th. 
 
As we travelled along the somewhat monotonous road from Paris to Malmaison, it was 
difficult  to  realise  that  we  should  arrive  at  a  place  so  filled  with Napoleonic 
associations  as  is  that  small  palace  which  housed  so  remarkable a figure. To me, 
it was the  small  and  simple  garden,  so  unchanged  since  their  day,  with  its  
stream  and lawn and  drooping  trees,  which  retained  more  of  past  atmosphere  

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than did the house itself. The  old  coach-house  still  contained  some  of  Napoleon’s  
coaches;  and  in the palace, were  to  be  seen  Josephine’s  personal  possessions,  and 
Napoleon’s favourite chair, standing  on  a  raised  dais  in  his room. So permeated 
was that chair with his personality, even  after  so  many  years,  that  I  saw the pose 
of his shadowy form in it, drooping as if from  fatigue,  the  head  bowed  on  the  
chest,  perhaps  in fitful sleep. My time there was very   short   indeed   to   gather   
impressions,   but  although  some  years  have  passed  since 
that day, I can easily recall the atmosphere that hung around those walls. My French 
ancestry makes these scenes in France especially appealing to me; moreover, one of 
my Bazett forefathers was connected with Napoleon during his imprisonment in St 
Helena. 
 
I remember an aunt of mine telling me how an old member of the family visiting 
Madame Tussaud’s Exhibition exclaimed, ‘Why, there is our old carriage!’ it had been 
given by Napoleon to their family, and she had lost sight of its whereabouts. 

 

A curious little incident connected with Napoleon occurred when I visited some 
friends, who happened to remark that their ancestors had also been in St Helena during 
his time there, and they produced a ring which he had habitually worn. As I held it, it 
was teeming with battle-scenes and sounds of cannon- fire; I said so, and laid it aside; 
my host remarked, ‘Surely, this is the eve of Waterloo,’ which indeed it proved to be.

 

 

A critic reading the manuscript of this book suggested that I should make it quite clear 
whether it was really Napoleon himself that I saw in his chair, or whether it was an 
akashic picture, in the sense that occultists use the phrase, meaning an impression 
made upon

 

the ether.

 

 

Here again, one questions, ‘Of what character is the impression that is left upon an 
object closely associated with a person during a lifetime, and remaining after a 
person’s death?’ I doubt whether we know the answer for certain. When these 
intangible matters have been labelled with names, the mystery has not necessarily 
been made clear. All that I feel prepared to say at present is, that in my personal 
experience, there are degrees of clearness in the pictures thus focussed. Some give less 
sense of a real personality than others; some appear more like a photograph, showing 
no movement; others seem rather like dream-creations; others again, defy any attempt 
at definite explanation, though one might partially describe them. They seem to touch 
the verge of a different order of psychic experience, in the same way that deep 
mystical perception is outside the range of ordinary life. 
 
Then again, there are those that convey a vivid and undoubted sense of a living 
personality, sometimes even seeking intercourse with the living. 
 
Another great centre of interest to me in France was the Palace and Gardens of 
Versailles, a place that I had always wished to see. 
 
I hoped, as I reached it in the quiet of the early morning, to recapture with clairvoyant 
sight some of the scenes which had belonged to the poignant days of Marie Antoinette 
and her King. 
 

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Although the gardens have retained so much of the natural beauty of that past romantic 
age, yet there steals over one a sense of desolation, and a heavily oppressive 
atmosphere pervades the whole place. 
 
There was practically no one about in the Gardens; there seemed nothing to draw 
one’s attention to the present; and as one came within sight of the Grand Trianon, the 
excessive stillness and the sense of stepping over enchanted ground stole gently and 
irresistibly over one. 
 
 
 
That building, standing amidst trees and soft green grass, felt peculiarly lonely and 
devoid, as it would seem, of all that had given it life and colour. 
 
As I slowly approached, tiptoeing instinctively lest one should disturb the ghosts that 
still lived within those walls, I heard faintly the music of a bygone period; some 
stringed instrument, musty, no doubt, with time, was lightly touched by unseen 
fingers, sounding intermittently, with long pauses between, its melancholy air 
blending strangely with the freshness of the morning. 
 
I stood immediately below the windows from which issued these sounds, outside the 
eastern portion of that massive building. Not a living soul was in sight, and apart from 
the music, nothing save a rustling of leaves broke upon the stillness that surrounded 
that old haunted mansion, bare of all furnishing, dead to the present, yet with live 
memories of the past still functioning in an unknown sphere of their own. 
 
Noticing the long trunk of a fallen tree a little way ahead, I walked in that direction, 
and there rested under a fine group of trees in full view of the Grand Trianon, and of 
the magnificent avenue by which it is approached. No tourist was yet to be seen in the 
gardens, only an artist who sat and sketched in the far distance. 
 
Turning my head to take in the surrounding landscape, I noticed a little building 
standing in the open space behind us. From it, a man in old-time costume stepped out, 
hurried across the grass, turning neither to right nor left, and vanished into thin air. He 
was unaware of the living, and was a shadow of the past. 
 
Here again, the same question arises: ‘What exactly is it that one sees?’ this man from 
the past, and any similar apparition  -  is he alive in another (non-physical) body, and 
attracted to this historic spot with which he was once closely linked? Is this memory or 
attraction constant or intermittent? Or, is he drawn there momentarily by some one’s 
keen interest in his period of history? 
 
If reincarnation be a fact, have I, or any other sensitive who has seen him, some 
curious unknown link also with his historical period? And does this constitute, or help 
to constitute, the right conditions for such seeings? A definite statement is difficult, 
because when thus seeing figures from the past, one does not necessarily feel, touch, 
or hear them; so that the evidence upon which one can draw for a definite statement is 
limited; whereas with ordinary people, all our sense-perceptions are called into play, 
enabling us to recognise them. 
 

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Shortly after meeting with the strange figure that I have described, my attention was 
arrested by the sight of a long procession of twenty or more graceful figures in double 
file winding its way up the avenue. They were all young girls, wearing the same type 
of dress, a simple flowing robe of grey-blue colouring. In a few seconds, the girls in 
procession had vanished; there was no sign of life around, complete stillness pervaded 
the gardens. 
 
About  the  grounds  were  various  grassy  tracks leading to water. Halfway-down one 
of these,  my  attention  was  arrested  by  a  small  building;  I  saw  the  thatched  roof 
and part of   the   walls,   half   hidden   by   a  thick  shrubbery;  no  approach  was  
anywhere  visible.  I 
 
 
asked a friend who had now joined me, ‘Can you see a building among those bushes?’ 
and was surprised when she said, ‘I can see nothing.’ 
 
On our return from the pool, I looked again for the building, but it had completely 
disappeared. We were in the wooded portion of the grounds, and upon that site might 
have stood one of the woodmen’s cottages in the olden days. In one of the smaller 
avenues of the Grand Trianon, the figure of a man in dark clothing of the period of 
Marie Antoinette passed us by in feverish haste, and I observed another similarly 
clothed close to the little terrace above the lake. Although I passed quite close to one 
of these, he gave me the impression of being utterly preoccupied, and totally unaware 
of our presence. 
 
The same unawareness and preoccupation accompanied the appearance of two persons 
approaching within a few yards of us. They were a lady and gentleman in old-
fashioned dress of rich colouring, in a very ornate style. They talked with great 
animation, yet I could hear nothing of what they said. The lady constantly tossed her 
head coquettishly, as she walked with her arm linked in his; both were tall and well-
built. They were approaching from the direction of a small building standing upon a 
rustic bridge; their figures stood out clearly in the bright sunlight. In a flash, they, too, 
were gone, and the bridge also, and I was abruptly recalled to the present once again. 
 
At one point, I lost my sense of direction in those vast spaces that make up the 
Gardens of Versailles, and I was anxious to reach the Petit Trianon by as direct a route 
as possible. Looking round, I saw no one about whom we could ask, and I remember 
making a mental appeal that some one might indicate the direction that we should 
take. 
 
Whether it was in response to my request, I cannot say; but there appeared in the 
distance a curious lean figure in close- fitting jerkin and breeches, who gesticulated and 
pointed almost vehemently. We followed along that way, and found that it led directly 
to the Petit Trianon. In this case alone did any ghostly figure of the past show the least 
sign of being aware of our presence. 
 
I sat for some time in the little formal garden of the Petit Trianon, in view of the 
Chapelle, raising my eyes occasionally to the terrace where Marie Antoinette used to 
sit, hoping that I might catch a glimpse of her. Here, it seemed to me, was 
concentrated the intense feeling that was bound up with the life and tragedy of that 

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prominent figure in history who, for good or ill, had been the centre of that kingly 
court. 
 
The atmosphere that clung so overpoweringly around that little garden was almost 
suffocating in its intensity. I rose from the seat, walking up and down to shake off the 
feeling. Had I not resisted it, I felt that I should be overcome by a heavy drowsiness 
that almost amounted to a trance-state. In such a condition, anything might open up 
before one; and although curiosity and interest tempted me to succumb, I knew full 
well that to do so might expose me to experiences and sights which, however true to 
fact, would be obtained only at a cost that one would not lightly risk. Here I felt that I 
was on the verge of entering into the very heart and spirit of Versailles, as it had been 
in the days of the Queen. 
 
 
 
 
 
Curiously enough, I had the same overwhelming sensation three times in different 
parts of the Grand Trianon gardens; but I was to experience a much more extreme 
form of it near the little building known as the Boudoir de la Reine. Its tiny garden was 
well- fenced round; no entrance was possible. A rough path led up to the door, which 
was closed, and had obviously been so for many years. I walked on further, and 
returned to it later. I looked again, and to my astonishment, the door was now partly 
open, as my friend could also see. As I looked, it opened still further, and a man 
hurried out, came down the path to within a yard of us, turned abruptly towards the 
back of the building, and disappeared. He, like the others whom I had seen, seemed 
preoccupied and unmindful of the living, though he almost touched me in his feverish 
haste. I was anxious to follow him, so we found a way round to the back of the 
building, walking slowly along a little grass track which led into a wide avenue. About 
halfway along this path, I seemed to encounter a strong resistance, as if unseen figures 
were barring the way against us. I endeavoured to push on in spite of it, but the 
overpowering sensation which I have described before came over me in full force, so 
that I found myself sinking to the ground. It was with considerable difficulty that my 
friend dragged me, gasping, to the end of the path, where I eventually recovered 
myself. 
 
I cannot account conclusively for this incident, but my own theory is, that possibly in 
old days, that portion of the grounds had been strictly reserved for the Queen’s use, 
and that no outsider would have been tolerated there for an instant. 
 
The whole atmosphere of Versailles was oppressive and haunting, and I was glad to 
find the quickest way out of the gardens, and into the normal life of our own day once 
more. 
 
Readers will remember that I said earlier in this chapter that even an object will re-
create to a psychic the atmosphere pertaining to the personality of its owner, and 
particularly if the object be a letter, clothing worn, or some possession closely 
connected with the person. 
 

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I remember a personal object, the history of which I was unaware; when I held it 
psychometrically to obtain it story, I recaptured its original setting in Africa. I 
gathered that it had been successively owned by three persons, but the personality with 
whom I linked most strongly was the first owner. Was it that I was more in sympathy 
with that first owner than the later ones? Or was there some magnetic or other 
emanation from the first owner clinging about that object, and persisting more strongly 
than the influence of the others? I inclined to the idea that something potent in a 
person clings to those things associated with him in his lifetime, and persists long after 
he and his day have gone. 
 
Again, a piece of brick from an old building, a relic from some shrine, or any suchlike 
thing, will reproduce something of the setting of its past association or history. 
 
The psychometric faculty is as yet but little understood. How long such impressions 
cling around these objects, I have no idea, but in the following instance, the object 
held dated as far back as the sixth or seventh century of our era. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
I was fortunate enough to procure three specimens of what I believed to be sand, from 
a district in the east where excavations were in progress; they were sent to me by some 
one connected with the expedition. 
 
Three tiny bags reached me by post, all alike in size and shape, numbered One, Two,  
Three. 
 
By means of psychometry  -  in my case, holding an object to the forehead  -  I 
received an impression that numbers Two and Three dealt with civilization at different 
stages of development. I saw also a symbolic sign which proved to resemble that of 
the Sun-God whose influence was in the ascendant at that period. The impressions 
connected with Two and Three were inclined to become intermingled, but held many 
indications which, when examined, were found to correspond with the facts, such as 
ancient customs of pre-civilized times, and the surface- levels of the country, etc. 
 
Number One presented, from the first, an entirely different picture, and I felt that it 
was definitely connected with a person. This surprised me very much, as I believed the 
little bag to contain sand only, like the others; the feeling to one’s fingers through the 
canvas was exactly the same. 
 
I give a few extracts from rough notes jotted down by a friend at the time: ‘This is 
entirely different from the others…  the others are out of door scenes, as it were…  this 
is something of an entirely different character. I might be psychometrising a personal 
letter, or some personal article…  it is like the feeling of a person…  I rather wondered 
whether this person or persons would wear some very large jewel, or cross- like object, 
on the breast…  one piece across the other…  not necessarily a cross….  Its length was 
greater than its width….  I should rather wonder if it had been lying inside something 
for a long, long time…  holding it, I almost felt as if I were buried…  lying in an 

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extremely quiet spot, rather a wonderful spot….  I felt an atmosphere then as of 
sleeping in great peace, resting in a wonderful spot…  a feeling of being underground, 
that kind of thing…  as if I myself were under the ground, or shut in somewhere…  I 
should suggest that there might be considerable interest about the person or persons…  
an outstanding figure or figures…  it seemed to be on the lefthand side, as if the head 
were in a corner. If it is connected with one person, it is a man…  I get a male 
figure….’ 
 
Comments on the above showed that number One bag had contained a bit of the skull 
of a Christian, out of a grave of the sixth or seventh century A.D. this accounted for 
the impression being indicative of a personality, rather than of a community or race. 
 
I have shown in this chapter something of the individual and historic atmosphere that 
remains, when those who created it have departed. 
 
I suppose that history in its continuity has its influence and effect on each succeeding 
generation. 
 
All students of life read back into the thought and accumulated knowledge of the past; 
they study also the personalities of those closely associated with it. 
 
The psychic touch with the past of which I have been writing is a new way of 
apprehending it. The scenes may be shadowy, and the actors mute; yet they sometimes 
evoke strong feeling, as though arising from some real experience. 
 
 
The method of recall is direct, immediate, and almost identifies the perceiver with the 
experience itself; it is totally different from the exercise of imagination. 
 
Most people are acquainted with the reproduction of the past in historical pageants 
acted in their original surroundings. In such pageants, episodes from the past are 
presented very vividly, and remembered for a certain length of time. They are, 
however, re-created artificially, to stimulate our historic sense. 
 
What the psychic sees from the past is more allied to actual experience of that past, as 
if for the moment he were touching some living part of it. 
 
An artist looking at a faded masterpiece feels the touch of the painter upon it, and is 
sympathetically linked with him, in a manner that would be impossible when looking 
at a reproduction, however excellent. 
 
What I am trying to make clear is, that this psychic perception of the past appears to be 
of the nature of real experience, in varying degrees of vividness. 
 
I do not myself think that the psychic, or any other human being, has access to all 
types of experience. What one sees is, after all, conditioned by what one is able to 
apprehend. Two people may live through the same series of events; one will remain 
untouched by them; the other will have thereby absorbed a great deal into his own life. 
 

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Where my own psychic powers have functioned most vividly has been in connection 
with persons and character, and their setting; this would be in keeping with my 
training and work as a teacher. 
 
My psychic perception of the past is in line with my natural interest in history and 
archaeology, and the thread of continuity in human existence portrayed by these and 
kindred subjects. 

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CHAPTER VIII 

 

INDICATIONS OF OUR LARGER DESTINY 

 
 
 
In the last chapter I have spoken of the ability that the psychic has to step back into 
earlier periods of history, and glimpse a little about them. 
 
Another question comes to our minds, and that is, whether our personal lives have had, 
perhaps, some other birth into a different setting; whether, in fact, we have lived on 
earth before. Apart from whether people like or dislike the idea, it must have struck 
them sometimes that this brief experience of seventy years or so is very little in which 
to gather up all that earth- life has to give. It might be that the personality, in the course 
of its evolution, could live out various aspects of life on this same planet, to its great 
advantage; many people are of opinion that there are indications pointing in that 
direction. If true, it would seem to give a fairer chance to some who are handicapped 
throughout the whole of their life here. 
 
Be that as it may, there are people  -  and young people too  -  who affirm that they are 
convinced that they have lived here before. 
 
Only recently, a young naval officer told me this of himself; he held different views 
from his parents in this respect. Another one who made the same statement was an 
officer killed in the present war; I feel sure that there are many others. 
 
A curious story in this connection was told me by the invalid daughter of a gardener, 
who had certainly never read any book on the subject. 
 
I was driving her in my car one day, when she told me this story. 
 
She and her sister had a holiday together in Dorset, a county that she had never visited 
before. The place at which they stayed had, she told me, a strangely familiar feeling 
about it, as if she had known it at some time. 
 
Stopping abruptly in her story, she asked me, ‘Do you think we could have lived 
before on this earth?’ I replied, ‘Possibly so, but one does not know for certain.’ 
 
Returning to her story, she told me that she took a short walk each day across a field, 
and that that walk had a peculiar attraction for her. She did not take her sister with her, 
nor mention this walk to her sister. 
 
Each day, that particular field took on a more poignant feeling of a personal 
association, which she could not account for. The last time she went there before 
finally leaving the neighbourhood, she told me that she felt as if, in some past time, 
something of a rather terrible nature had happened to her there, by which she met her 
death; she felt that this should be the last time of ever visiting it. During the many 
years I have known her, she has never spoken of anything of the kind before, and 
when we were together, we spoke only of ordinary matters. 
 

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Another strange story is connected with a friend who motored over one day to tea, 
when we sat in the garden together. We were talking on general matters, when 
suddenly I saw her form become shadowy, as if she were fading from view; she was 
wearing bright clothing, and we were sitting in strong sunlight. 
 
A very strange sensation came over me, and as I glanced at her again, I saw that a 
peculiar change had taken place in her. I was looking now not at the lady who had 
come to tea, but at a Roman soldier; for a fraction of time, the lady had completely 
vanished, and there stood before me this man; the lady had been sitting in a very low 
chair. 
 
We looked at each other, and I made some excuse to go into the house for a moment, 
as this experience had affected me strangely. I felt as if I had been right out of my 
present surroundings for a second or two, and had gone back in time. When I returned 
to the garden, my friend was sitting quietly waiting for me, as though nothing peculiar 
had occurred; she showed no sign of having experienced anything unusual. 
 
Before she left me, however, I turned the conversation to the subject of reincarnation, 
and asked her opinion on the question. She answered, ‘I do not know, but I have 
occasionally experienced the sensation of returning to an early period of our English 
history; in fact, I always feel that I was at one time a Roman solider.’ I did not tell her 
of what I had seen a few moments before whilst talking to her, and the subject 
dropped. 
 
I well remember the face of a man whom I knew slightly undergoing a similar change 
whilst we were listening to music in a drawing-room one evening. Three different 
distinct faces were superimposed successively upon his own, and all were recognised 
by some one who knew him. One other mediumistic guest saw the same phenomena, 
but neither of us spoke of this to him. 
 
It is questionable how far we are strictly confined within this physical organism; but I 
have no theory to offer with regard to these two latter cases. 
 
My own experience with regard to the past came to me in a dream, and still remains 
vividly in my memory. 
 
I dreamed that I was walking through a village in Palestine, a country that I have never 
visited; I knew every inch of the little winding road, and the hills on my right; also the 
wide stretch of pastoral fields away to the distance on my left, across a deep valley. It 
seemed that I was back in a spot where I had lived before; I recognised the houses 
clustering beneath the hills; and once I remember stopping to speak to some one. It 
was a youngish man, one whom I felt I had known very well at some other period of 
my existence. I realised, as I stopped to speak to him, that I was as well known to him 
as he was to myself. We talked; but what we said, I do not know. I do not think that he 
was living there then, but that in all probability he, too, was revisiting some old 
familiar spot, in the same way that I appeared to be doing. 
 

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This  going  backward  into  a  past  that  has  some  connection  with  oneself  is a real 
and vital   experience,   and  one  that  is  not  forgotten;  it  is  totally  different  from  
the  ordinary 
 
 
 
 
dream. I felt that I was out of my physical body at the time, definitely revisiting a spot 
that was bound up with something intimate and personal in my existence. 
 
Again, I offer no theory; but there are a number of other recorded examples of a 
somewhat similar nature, and the idea of reincarnation of the soul may be the 
explanation. 
 
Another common experience is when we meet for the first time people who give us the 
impression that we have met them before. There is a feeling as if we had always 
known each other; and it may be that our experiences have coincided in former lives. 
 
Those who saw the play ‘Berkeley Square,’ produced some years ago, dealing with the 
subject of reincarnation, will remember the sense of reality conveyed when the man of 
the present century speaks of a girl of a previous century whom he had evidently 
known intimately. His contemporaries were incredulous and amazed, and even 
doubted his sanity. 
 
For myself, I cannot imagine that the brevity of our life here is in any way adequate 
for acquiring all the experience that earth could give; it would, I imagine, need many 
lives for most of us to accomplish this task. 
 
For many people this physical plane would, no doubt, be the best training- ground for 
gaining such experience; others might learn better on some other plane. 
 
My whole experience of psychic matters inclines me to think that human life is 
interwoven and intermingled in a most complex and far-reaching way. We are 
strangely linked with one another, quite apart from personal acquaintance; and I think 
that parts of this book serve to illustrate that point. 
 
Life is undoubtedly one, as modern thinkers are asserting; and there are probably no 
sharp dividing lines between any experiences or periods of time. There seems to be 
numerous connecting links of which we are unaware, but which we seem to come 
upon now and then; to what limits these links extend, we simply do not know; but the 
whole idea, if followed out, is of absorbing interest. 
 
I will close this chapter with two more curious personal instances which show us again 
these hidden links. 
 
It was rather over a year before I met the author of a book which greatly interested me; 
at the time, I had not come across either the book or its author. 
 
One day during daylight, I was psychically aware of a tall lady at our front door, who 
carried rather a heavy suitcase; I noticed that it was covered with labels of foreign 

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travel. I noticed also the exact colour and material of her dress; her figure was inclined 
to be large and awkward. The eyes of this lady were very striking  -  not so much in 
their beauty as in their keen penetrating glance  -  tempered with reserve and shyness; 
the colour of them was blue. 
 
I remember describing this figure to my friend, and making a note of it, adding that I 
felt sure that this lady would some day come across our path, and stay in our house. 
Some months after this, a book was lent to me to read for a few hours, as it had to be 
returned quickly. Apart from its contents, I felt that the author and I would have a 
good deal in common. Some time later, the idea flashed into my mind, that the lady 
carrying the bag was identical with the author of the book; I do not know how I 
arrived at this idea. It was not, however, until later still, that I decided to write to this 
author, and suggest her coming to us for a night. 
 
When she eventually arrived, and I came to meet her in the drawing-room, she was 
exactly as I had seen her psychically so long before. She noticed during tea that I 
scrutinised her rather closely, and asked why; I fetched my notebook, and read the 
entry to her. That unseen link was the means of creating what I think will be a lasting 
friendship. 
 
Is it part of life’s plan that certain people should cross our path, and certain 
experiences come to us? I personally am inclined to think that there is no such thing as 
mere chance. 
 
A still more curious occurrence happened to me while I was on the platform of a large 
railway station, waiting for a train. 
 
I was walking up and down alone, when a psychic vision appeared to me of a man of 
middle age who joined me, and walked by my side. His appearance was very clear and 
striking; he was of medium height, well-built, wearing a tweed suit; he had a large 
powerful head, with firm face and chin. His hair was greying, and slightly wavy; his 
face was well tanned, his eyes grey. I knew instinctively that his work lay in the East. 
We kept up a conversation for several minutes, and it was of a definite character; he 
had come to give me some particular message, it seemed. He said that he had to return 
to the East, but would come again at a much later date. 
 
This came true about two years later, when I saw him again quite clearly, this time in 
my own home. He said that he would come once more, probably for the last time. He 
kept his promise as before, but the third time, I saw him only momentarily. I have no 
idea of his name, nor of the Eastern country from which he came; nor do I normally 
know anything of him at all. Yet the first time that I saw him, I had an intimate 
conversation with him, and felt that we mutually understood one another. 
 
Each time that he came to me, I had the impression of him as a person who was 
immersed in a mass of work, which he had temporarily left. Whenever I saw him, he 
brought the atmosphere of the East with him; I could sense the colouring, and almost 
feel the heat of it; I felt that he was out of his accustomed setting in the West. 
 
I have many times seen visions of those who have passed over, and these have 
sometimes been of quite an objective character; but in the case that I have just related, 

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I felt that the man was actually living on earth at the time, although at a great distance 
away. 

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CHAPTER IX 

 
 

SEEING INTO THE FUTURE 

 
 
 
We are becoming increasingly aware that our consciousness is not confined within the 
limitations of Time as it is commonly understood. 
 
We have assumed that Time looks backward and forward in length of years, but there 
is a good deal to show that other aspects of the question need to be considered. 
 
In this connection, it is worth referring to a book by Rufus M. Jones, Some Problems 
of Life;
 he says there: ‘There is Space-Time, where one moment flows on after another 
moment…  There is another kind of Time…  this is Duration-Time…  Past, Present, 
and Future, are fused into a momentous duration, or Time-Span, which we feel going 
on within us. We are living in it, not seeing it from the outside…  When we are 
deciding some all- important issue of life, we are immersed in an inward duration- flow, 
which is as indivisible into parts as life itself is. It is a decisive vital moment, in which 
significance rather than length is what matters. At such times, the mind feels as though 
it were operating with its accumulated wisdom present as an indivisible whole, rather 
than discursively proceeding from part to part. This capacity of ours to fuse Time into 
a momentous Now  -  a living unit  -  is one of the unique traits belonging only to a 
person.’ 
 
With regard to the future, it has been often affirmed that it is in some sense 
determined; or, alternatively, that it is wholly fortuitous. I shall not discuss this 
involved question, but will give examples showing some of Time’s problems as I have 
encountered them. 
 
The matter under consideration was the letting of some rooms in a friend’s house, 
which had been empty for months. I applied my mind to picturing what sort of people 
might take these rooms, and this is roughly how my sub-conscious mind worked upon 
it. 
 
It came to know (psychically) that some one with a name beginning with F…  or 
possibly E…  would inquire about the rooms. It then visualised a doctor whose name 
began with F…, slightly known to myself, coming down the front staircase of the 
house in which were the empty rooms. It pictured the F…  and the E…, rather 
hesitating at first between the two, and finally settled on the F. It then proceeded, 
without any effort, to assume that these people would be settled in the house well 
within a month. 
 
There was then no thought of these people coming to the rooms; they did not even 
know that the rooms were vacant, nor were they thinking of moving from where they 
were. So the question of telepathy, which will occur to my readers, must surely be 
ruled out. 
 

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The  curious  point  about  this  lies  in  the  fact  that  what my mind apprehended was 
true, and  at  the  same  time  faulty;  because,  quite  unexpectedly,  this  Dr.  F.  and  
his wife heard 
 
 
 
 
of the rooms, and arranged to take them, within a week of my perception of their doing 
so. The plan was, however, accidentally prevented, if there is such a thing as accident. 
 
To return to the original question…  ‘Who will take the rooms?’ My sub-conscious 
mind was still working on the letters E… and F… which had at first presented 
themselves. I further amplified the picture by adding that it was the sixth letter of the 
alphabet; or, if that was wrong, it was the one before or after. 
 
On November 6th, my mind played around these letters, and I saw two lines 
converging to a point, but nothing further about the letters. On November 7th, I saw 
three lines converging towards a given point, and I knew that coming events had 
moved to a conclusion, and that something had been settled.  
 
Events proved that about this time, the plans of three different sets of people had, 
unknown to myself, moved to a decision. These people were then complete strangers 
to me, nor did I know of their existence. 
 
To return again to the letters of the alphabet; the letters involved were E…,  F…,  G…  
Between November 7th and 9th, my mind had fixed on the letter G…  and arrived at a 
definite name, which proved eventually to be exactly correct, spelt phonetically. The 
name evolved in a curious, roundabout way, from the recollection of a well-known 
play in which that name was very prominent. Space forbids my elaborating the details 
of the emergence of the name, but it involved hard mental work of selecting and 
discarding. 
 
On November 13th, a stranger bearing that name applied for the rooms, and engaged 
them; she was accompanied by a friend whose surname  -  as well as her own  -  began 
with G. her plans had involved three factors, that is, herself and two friends, one 
whose name began with G…,  and the other with F. The curious thing about all this is, 
that my mind saw the planning of the future by the people bearing the name of F. 
Neither they nor I saw that the idea of their taking the rooms was, apparently, 
incompatible with the larger general plan of their lives, and so did not come to pass. 
 
Dr. F. had planned to continue his literary work in the quiet rooms chosen. They 
settled shortly afterwards in London, and I heard that he was accidentally killed in the 
black-out, his wife dying of sudden illness a few weeks later. In planning our lives 
within our limited horizon, we do not see the direction of the greater plan within which 
ours must necessarily operate. 
 
Another indication of something about to take place, also came through seeing 
individual letters. 
 

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I was staying for the night with a perfect stranger, when I saw in large gold printed 
letters  -  in space before me, as it were  -  the letters W. and S.  they conveyed nothing 
whatever to my mind just then. On my way home the same day, however, I felt 
strongly impressed to break my journey at a little village the name of which began 
with S.; I had lived there as a child. I turned down this impulse more than once, as I 
feared I should be delayed too long. I did, however, decide to go there, and on arriving 
at S., I went to the Vicarage. 
 
I had no idea who lived there, but found that the name of the present vicar was Watson 
(pseudonym). An interesting development of this meeting was, that he invited me to 
speak in his parish. 
 
The ability to see a little way into the future does not necessarily carry with it the 
power to alter what is coming. 
 
In connection with a friend whom I will call Nora, I had a premonition on three 
consecutive days, that an accident would happen to her. A day or two later, she 
sustained a double fracture of the right leg. I was entirely unable to prevent this, as I 
had no intimation of the nature of the accident; later on, when complications arose in 
connection with the injury, I was able to help in the following way. 
 
An operation was suggested, to which Nora had agreed, and arrangements were in 
active progress. I was away from her at the time, but hurried back by an early train, as 
I felt that I was to prevent that operation from taking place. I arrived a few minutes 
before the doctor, who was to talk over the final arrangements and told him of my 
intuition. He agreed to cancel the arrangements for the present. Eventually, another 
way of treatment was tried, resulting in an entire cure, whereas the operation at first 
proposed would have entailed a permanent lameness. 
 
In connection with my own life, I have had a premonition as long as a year before the 
occurrence. A voice told me psychically that I should have an operation costing £50, 
and that this sum would be given me. The whole of this information seemed unlikely 
enough at the time, but a year later, everything happened as I had been told, even to 
the provision of the £50! This latter came from a totally unexpected quarter.  
 
Before the operation, Feda (Mrs Osborne Leonard’s ‘control’) came to me in the 
Nursing Home, and said that I should be all right, and was not to worry. 
 
On the day of the operation, as I lay in bed beforehand, I had the curious experience of 
seeing myself standing at the foot of my bed, and watching me. I have also, on another 
occasion, felt my etheric body lying above the physical one, when on my bed; the 
distance between them was about three feet. 
 
A fragment of information relating to a friend flashed into my mind one day. It was 
given, symbolically, in the form of an eagle soaring upwards, and the words heard 
clairaudiently were, ‘The bringer of news.’ It was definitely connected in my mind 
with this particular person, and I heard shortly afterwards that he had received 
promotion in his work. 
 

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I come now to a foretelling which involved personal relationships. I will describe one, 
of which the fulfilment was delayed during six and a half years. Permission has been 
generously given to make it known for the interest and benefit of others; it shows the 
effectual help that may be given by those in the Larger Life. I need hardly say that 
pseudonyms have been used throughout. 
 
A  young  medical  student  of  brilliant  promise  died  before  his  training  was 
completed. His  parents  and sisters had centred great expectations around his career, 
and were heartbroken   when   his   early   death   occurred.   They   were   a  
particularly  united  family, 
 
 
and George was the member whose magnetic personality inspired them all. He 
planned for his parents’ and sisters’ future, and looked forward to the time when he 
could shoulder their financial burden. Their father was a much-loved doctor, living in 
the poorer quarter of a great city, where he devoted time and strength to a large 
practice amongst the poor. George gave what help he could as a student, in his spare 
time. Both parents were growing old, and George was their only surviving son. 
 
It was very shortly after his death that he attempted (quite spontaneously) to manifest 
his continued presence in their home, where he succeeded in making himself both 
heard and seen. The eldest sister, Margaret, wrote to a prominent scientist known to be 
interested in these matters, telling him of these occurrences, and asking for explanation 
and advice. 
 
Through his instrumentality, they eventually came in touch with me, and there began a 
long series of intimate messages between George and his family, extending over some 
years. He followed, as he used to do, the lives of his parents and sisters, watching with 
the utmost tenderness over his mother’s failing health, and his sisters’ developing 
plans and work. He told his parents of the little son who had died in childhood, and 
whom, on passing over into the new life, he had encountered as a grown man. 
 
One of the most significant points in his communications concerned his sister 
Margaret, of whom he was exceedingly fond; he foretold to her events which were to 
transpire in the future. He described the character of a man whose name he gave, 
including its quite unusual spelling  -  GREANE; he gave it also in the form of 
GREEN. 
 
He went on to describe the open country in which this man lived, and his love of 
nature; the balmy climate was also mentioned. He lived in a far-distant continent, but 
George maintained that he would cause Greane to come to this country, and that 
eventually he and Margaret would meet. 
 
November was the month mentioned. His sister was abroad at the time that she 
received this message through me. For some unexplained reason, she put it entirely 
aside, forgetting it completely until seven years had elapsed. 
 
Six months earlier (that is, six and a half years after the original prediction) the man 
spoken of as Greane (name and spelling correct) had come to England and had made 
her acquaintance as George had foretold; November was the month of their meeting. 

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All that George had described concerning him was entirely correct. Greane told 
Margaret that during a whole year, whilst still in the far-off continent, he felt strongly 
drawn to England, and to the particular part of the city where her family lived, though 
neither he nor Margaret had any knowledge of each other’s existence. He became a 
valued friend of the family, and was especially attached to Margaret’s mother. 
 
Six months after their meeting, Margaret wrote to me: ‘Quite recently  - tidying away 
some old papers, and coming across the message as if by chance  -  I read it through 
again, and was struck with amazement. Nothing was said to her family or to Greane 
about this message, by George’s special request. 
 
After her mother’s death, Margaret wrote to me again, telling me what comfort 
George’s messages had brought to her mother during her latter years; she kept them by 
her bedside, and read them constantly. It had been her custom, as long as she was able 
to write, to send letters addressed to her sons, which she asked me to communicate to 
them. These letters were answered in detail by George and his brother, and the 
answers passed on to her by myself. George’s letters to his mother contained not only 
words of affection, but numerous references to their home, and to such details as the 
dress worn by a sister on Christmas Day, and the hymns they sang; he mentioned the 
pet canary, observing that it needed a new cage. 
 
He made humorous comments on family incidents, and on one occasion drew attention 
to a damp patch on a wall, which could only be seen when a fixed mirror was moved. 
It was characteristic of him, as always, to notice every detail that concerned his family 
and home. 
 
 
Recently, I have met Margaret again, for the second time only. She told me that she 
was now living in Surrey, and that the announcement in The Times of her father’s 
recent death, and my subsequent letter to her, had brought us in touch once more. 
 
Our first meeting had been in 1917; yet after so long an interval, we met almost as old 
friends, so close may be the tie that binds the psychic to those whom he thus links with 
the unseen world. As Margaret remarked to me, ‘It is like coming home, because you 
seem to know all our family so intimately.’ 
 
I have experienced the same feeling of intimate relationship on meeting others with 
whom I have been linked by correspondence over many years; they come from distant 
parts of the world, but we do not meet as strangers. 

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CHAPTER X 

 
 

SEEING AT A DISTANCE 

 
 
 
We are only too well aware of the limitations imposed upon us by space. The fact that 
some people dwell in one part of the globe, whilst friends are separated from them by 
vast distances, is one of the limiting conditions of  human experience; although 
communications to-day are made so much easier that the separation need not be so 
complete as formerly. 
 
A person may be separated from us only by the length of a house or a street; but even 
so small a distance may create a definite sense of isolation. 
 
The psychic is able to overcome this difficulty to a certain extent, for he can 
sometimes see clairvoyantly what a person at a distance is doing; he can also get some 
idea of his state of health, and of his condition of mind and circumstance. 
 
One of the most interesting ways in which the mind seems able to transcend space is 
by means of psychometry; that is, the power to see visions of persons or places at a 
distance, by means of holding an object which has some connection with them. 
 
I shall here describe how this power can be used to help in tracing persons who are 
‘Missing.’ It is sometimes possible, whilst holding some object belonging to them, to 
gather indications of where they are, and what they are doing, which may lead to their 
discovery. 
 
Some years ago, I had been motoring until late in the afternoon, and on my arrival at 
home, found that some one was waiting to see me. 
 
It was a woman who told me that a friend of hers was in great trouble as her small boy 
aged nine had been missing from home for ten days, and she was racked with anxiety 
as to what might have happened to him. His father was dead, and she herself was 
obliged to go out to work, leaving the children alone at home for a great part of the 
day. The little boy was the eldest of the family, and much of the responsibility of the 
younger ones devolved upon him. 
 
On the day that she had last seen him, he had been sent with a small sum of money to 
do the shopping, and when she returned in the afternoon, the children told her that 
John (pseudonym) had not come home. Mrs Jones, the friend of the boy’s mother, left 
with me a piece of netting made by John, hoping that it would provide the necessary 
link with him. She had heard by chance that I was sometimes able to help in such 
cases, and urged me to do what I could as soon as possible, as the boy’s mother had 
had no rest at all since his disappearance. 
 
I tried that evening to get some idea of his conditions by holding the piece of netting, 
and gained the impression that the child was safe, and in good hands; no harm 

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whatever had come to him, of that I was certain. I wrote to the mother immediately to 
tell her this, and then proceeded later that evening to get further impressions. 
 
I gathered that John had not done the shopping, but had entered a bus which was on its 
way to London. 
 
Further psychometry showed me that he had reached London, and was in good care; 
the name POP…  was impressed upon me. Careful inquiry resulted in the boy being 
traced to a home in Poplar, and restored to his mother. 
 
It transpired that on reaching London, he had wandered about until evening, when a 
kindly woman saw him, and took him to a Home for Boys, where he remained very 
happily for the whole time of his disappearance, apparently unconscious of the fact 
that his mother would be anxious about him. He was delighted to be free, for the first 
time in his life, from the care of the little ones, and enjoyed the good food and rest in 
the Home. 
 
Immense relief of mind had been given to John’s mother by my first news of him, and 
she was able to sleep, feeling confident that all was well with the boy. Her friend Mrs. 
Jones told me later that she thought that the sleep had prevented a serious breakdown. 
One cannot help thinking that John might have been very much longer absent from 
home, if this help had not been available. 
 
I once tried to trace a ‘missing’ girl of nineteen, who had been studying at a college in 
the North, and who had disappeared completely one afternoon, leaving no indication 
whatever as to her whereabouts. Her father and a younger brother came to see me, 
obviously very much distressed. They brought with them a little note written by Eileen 
(pseudonym) two days before her departure; it was written in a cheerful strain, and 
made no reference to any plan for going away. 
 
After they had left, I psychometrised the letter, but could gain nothing very definite. I 
saw her in a boat on some water, with other people. Next day, I could see her in a large 
bare room in a square building, sitting at a deal table which had been well scrubbed. 
She was eventually traced to a Convent Home, where she had taken refuge; she had 
been in just such a room as I had seen. 
 
In this case, I could not obtain anything very definite which in itself would serve to 
trace Eileen, but it was certainly of use in conjunction with efforts made by relations 
and others. I was not told of this case until some weeks after Eileen’s disappearance, 
which made the task of tracing her more difficult. I think the reason for this might be, 
that during those weeks, there were so many cross-currents from other sources; such, 
for instance, as police investigation and reports, the surmises of various people, 
correspondence concerning her, and so on. My mind would be impeded in this way 
from getting directly in touch with her, and might pick up unconsciously some of these 
cross-currents. 
 
The case of Peter Richards (pseudonym) is one that I have permission to relate fully. 
 
His mother wrote to me at the suggestion of the Society for Psychical Research, asking 
if I could help in ‘an urgent matter,’ giving no further particulars, but enclosing two 

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short letters to act as a psychometric link. I was ill at the time, but owing to the 
urgency of the case, decided to psychometrise the letters for a few minutes at a time, 
as I felt able; more than that I could not do. 
 
Mrs Richards wrote on June 5th, and came to see me in the late afternoon of the 
following day. 
 
My first impressions were received in the early afternoon of June 6th, before her 
arrival. What emerged from them was as follows: The person concerned was not ill  -  
anxiety was not on that score. ‘he or she’ had disappeared, and I could follow no 
further then. I gathered that he would come through all right eventually; by that time, I 
was sure that the person in question was a man. He was going to do something that 
was not easy  -  in fact, a difficult undertaking, the character of which I could not 
fathom. 
 
Mrs Richards appeared greatly relieved and thankful for even these few fragments, 
which at least gave her hope that he would come through all right. She then told me 
that ‘he’ was her son, and that he was ‘missing’. 
 
On June 9th, I had the further impression that there was great heat where he was  -  
that he was ‘racing something’  -  going at a great pace  -  that he had to carry 
something through  -  he was overwrought, and at the breaking-point of endurance  -   
that there was a trying time ahead. My impression was, that he was young, and 
normally full of vitality. I gathered that he was abroad. I saw him lying on his back, 
with one arm stretched out. 
 
On June 10th, the continued impressions contained once more the idea of heat  -  a 
block of difficulties in his way  -  some one (not Richards) uttered a shout of glee on 
finding something…  Richards’ mind appeared by now to be somewhat unhinged or 
overwrought…  I saw a temple, with a red light at one end…  He felt the whole 
responsibility on himself. What he was doing then was alien to his nature. 
 
On June 11th, the impressions gained were, that he was not wearing his normal 
clothing, but wore something yellowish thrown over one shoulder. I also thought that 
he set out by rail. Then came three letters: C…  A…  S…  and the assurance that he 
would emerge at an unexpected point. I questioned; ‘Is he going to a high, hilly 
district?’ Some native appeared to be with him at some time. I came to the conclusion 
that there had been anxiety at some central point, which might have been responsible 
for his present condition. The idea of India now presented itself to my mind. 
 
On June 12th, the impressions conveyed that he was wearing light or white clothing  -   
that something had been stolen  -  that there might have been an accident. He left the 
train at a junction, and entered a vehicle. 
 
On June 13th, I gathered psychically that he went with several natives to an isolated 
spot…  there was ‘a suffocating feeling of heat to one’s head, then an uprush of 
something all round…’  Something ‘led into quite unforeseen complications…’  The 
notes of June 18th refer several times to ‘great excitement,’ and ‘papers strewn in the 
office…’  I had the impression that a letter called him away on this journey…  I 
queried whether Richards had money?…  He seemed to know that there would be 

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tremendous risks, but excitement urged him on… At one point, he held something 
between two fingers, and put it into his mouth…  He could not now be got at easily, or 
get news through. ‘I can only hope, as before, that he will eventually come through.’ 
 
 
 
 
A good many letters came to me from Mrs Richards between June 5th and October 
10th, but few of them contained any information, or corroboration of what I had seen. 
 
On June 16th, Mrs Richards wrote that she had visited the London medium, Mr Vout 
Peters, who could give her very little news, but stated that the boy was not dead  -  that 
he was in hilly country  -  he mentioned a ruined temple and a holy man. It will be 
remembered that these points coincided with my own impressions. 
 
In her letter of June 22nd, Mrs Richards told me that the authorities in India 
considered that Peter must have left India, and possibly gone to Cashmir; otherwise, 
he must by that time have been found, dead or alive. She mentioned also that she had 
heard of ‘some slight friction at the office.’ (Note: On June 9th, I had given the letters 
C…  A…  S…, and had spoken of ‘trouble at the centre,’ presumably his office). 
 
Mrs Richards’ letter of August 6th told me that news had come to her of Peter having 
been seen on June 1st in Cashmir, by a girl who knew him slightly; she did not stop to 
speak to him, having heard nothing of his disappearance. 
 
On August 28th, Mrs Richards wrote: ‘Peter is leaving India next week, and coming 
home; he remembers nothing at all of anything that happened during all those weeks! 
We have only heard by cable.’ 
 
Her final letter (October 10th) told me that he had been home for a week, but was 
averse to being questioned as to his experiences in India, as he felt it ‘a terrible thing 
to have lived (for thirteen weeks) a life of which he knew nothing.’ His mother wrote: 
‘I will tell you the facts as we know them…  On May 14th, Peter had a very bad 
headache, and had to leave his office, and return to his Club; he says that he has been 
told that several people spoke to him, asking questions, etc., to which he gave no 
answer, and seemed not even to hear; he went to bed, and remained there 14th and 
15th; on 16th he returned to the office, and was apparently quite recovered, and the 
work and letters he wrote on that date and on the morning of 17th were particularly 
lucid and clear. 
 
He  left  the  office  at 12.30, and from that moment all is an utter blank. On August 
14th, Peter  had  an  altercation  with  and  assaulted  a  booking  clerk in Lahore 
Railway Station; the  police  were  called,  and he  was  taken  into  custody,  but  
although detained for two days  and  repeatedly  questioned,  he  never  spoke  at  all,  
and  took no notice of anything; the  police  decided  to  take  him  before  a  
magistrate,  to  see if he could get any information,  and  he  was  put  into  a  tonga  
with  one  of the police to be driven to the Court.  On  the  way,  a  motor  car ran into 
and upset their cart, and Peter was thrown out, and  knocked  unconscious; he was 
carried into a small café, and first-aid was given, ice applied  to  his  head,  etc., and in 
fifteen minutes he recovered consciousness and spoke, asking  to  be taken to his Club. 

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He was then asked who he was, and was told he was in Lahore,  and  he  then  realised  
that  he must  have  lost  his memory for thirteen weeks. He had  a  long  beard,  and  
was  wearing the same clothes he left in, but the shoes he was wearing  did  not  show  
any  signs  of  three  months’  wear,  and  his  shirt, etc., was clean. He  was  in  pretty  
good  bodily  condition,  but  rather  pale,  and his hands even now look like  the  
hands  of  some  one who had spent months in bed. The doctor in Lahore who attended   
him  said  his  loss  of  memory  might  be  caused  by  sunstroke;  he  examined  him 
for any signs of drugs, but found none. Peter had intended sending £200 home to his 
English Bank on May 17th and had that sum on him when he left the office; he had 1 
rupee 4 annas in his pocket when found. He has no remembrance of the altercation 
with the booking clerk. That is everything we know. He has a vague impression, not 
real knowledge, that he had been in care of natives, and dressed in native dress. I do 
not know whether the idea of sunstroke can be entirely believed; it would be entirely 
unusual for the condition to be ended by a shock!' 
 
Here closes this strange but true story. I may add that Mrs Richards and Peter are now 
both dead. 
 
I have so far restricted this chapter on ‘seeing at a distance’ to tracing the ‘Missing’, of 
which a good deal has come my way. 
 
I am able also to see what people at a distance are doing, and certain happenings 
which are taking place. 
 
Some sections of the war- zone have been vividly impressed on my mind, and I have 
followed psychically individual soldiers (strangers) seeing what was happening to 
them. I have found myself at night (out of the body) ministering in some way to a 
dying man in the open. 
 
I have seen the movements of ships, watching as if from the deck, and noticing 
features of the coastline that the ship was passing. 
 
The same applies to the Air Force especially. In that connection, I have often been 
able to ‘see’ the crew in a bomber as it passed over our locality at night. I have seen 
the individual men, and their positions in the plane; I have been aware of the 
temperament of these men, and their emotional condition. I recall this particularly in 
the case of some of the German planes which came over. I remember one particular 
night when I could single out one special bomber from many others, by the terrible 
feeling of hate that came from its crew. Another night, I felt sure that a certain enemy 
bomber contained a crew of very young men who were highly nervous, owing to their 
inexperience. 
 
This general awareness of things outside one’s immediate focus is a common 
experience to every psychic person; to these, life is touched at a great variety of points, 
and their field of perception is far wider than that of most people. This kind of 
awareness is not accompanied by any feeling of strain or strangeness; it is part of the 
natural make-up of a sensitive. 
 
Some of the psychics that I know are in ordinary life exceedingly practical and 
efficient, and capable with their hands; it very often accompanies the psychic gift, and 

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acts as an excellent counter-balance to this hypersensitiveness. The power has, of 
course, certain drawbacks; one cannot always select what one will see, but it has the 
advantage of being exceedingly interesting, adding many new features to one’s 
experience of life. 

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CHAPTER XI 

 

HEALING AND CLAIRVOYANT DIAGNOSIS 

 
 
One hears a good deal about Healing from various quarters outside the medical 
profession, because in the course of one’s life, one comes across cases which have 
nonplussed even the experts in medical science. Help has sometimes been obtained 
from certain persons who seem to be endowed with some gift of healing, or with the 
power of right diagnosis through ‘inner sight’ and other means. 
 
Recently, however, such persons have attracted a certain amount of notice from 
qualified medical men. 
 
People are becoming aware of the fact that there are aspects of the human organism 
which can be perceived by methods other than the usual ones. 
 
I personally knew two well- educated sensitives  -  one a university woman  -  who 
gave regular help in diagnosis to two doctors. 
 
I feel convinced that any one with experience of psychic gifts has something to offer 
with regard to the knowledge and understanding of this subject. 
 
Speaking from my own experience, I have not infrequently seen psychically the state 
of health of a person, and have occasionally located the particular region affected. 
There are very definite signs to guide this perception, as definite as those of the heart-
beats or respiration observed by the doctor. Many people are now familiar with the 
idea that the physical organism is not the only one possessed by an individual, but that 
he has other and less dense bodies, all closely interlinked. Various schools of thought 
have given different names to these finer bodies, but I am inclined to think from 
personal experience that there are three with which we are most closely concerned in 
our earthly existence. One is, of course, the physical, the other two being the astral and 
the etheric. Amongst advanced teachers in this branch of knowledge, there is a 
considerable accumulation of information concerning the functions, etc., of the two 
latter. 
 
For our present purpose, however, I am anxious to give, so far as I know them, some 
suggestions for the protection of these finer bodies, and their maintenance in health. 
 
It seems fairly certain that a considerable amount of nerve-weakness and other illness 
is due to defects in the working of these bodies. 
 
There are special cases such as accidents, mental and emotional strain, etc., in which 
these bodies suffer specific injury which can only be diagnosed and understood by 
those who are trained in this particular department of knowledge. I do not myself 
possess this training, but my qualifications as a psychic include the power to observe 
some of the conditions which come under this classification. 
 
I shall here describe the benefit that I myself received at a time of severe concussion 
after a fall. 

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In spite of the extreme care given by two orthodox medical men, it was not until I 
discovered a London specialist who, besides being a highly qualified medical man, 
understood the psychic make-up of such a one as myself, that the real process of 
healing began. 
 
I was unable to move from my bed to visit this specialist, so a friend went to see him 
on my behalf. He sent back a reassuring message, with a promise of assistance later, 
and some suggestions as to practical help during the intervening time. Strange as it 
may sound, I knew, on my friend’s return, the exact date at which I should visit the 
specialist myself, which proved to be three months later; I was also convinced that he 
had the power to heal me completely. This was not a simple matter, as both my spine 
and eyeballs were injured, especially the former, and I was in constant pain. My first 
few visits to Dr. X. were made by ambulance, as I could only be moved on a stretcher. 
 
During the interval preparatory to going to him, certain clear directions were given me 
from time to time by means of concentration on my part, by which I appeared to 
contact Dr. X. at a distance. Sometimes, I perceived him as though speaking directly to 
me; at other times, I saw a short figure of a man in Eastern dress, consisting of a long 
robe, and a headdress of curious shape. I learned later that Dr. X. recognised this 
person from my description; he was also aware of the fact that he himself had visited 
me astrally. 
 
The Eastern personage would, at times, wheel up to my bedside a curious font-shaped 
container made of crystal, and mounted on legs of golden colouring. This vessel 
contained clear blue water in which I was bidden to dip my hands, whilst the same 
individual splashed what appeared to be water over my head. His arrival was always 
preceded by the appearance of a strong blue light. On one occasion, when lying with 
my back to the window, he bade me reverse my position, enabling me to make the 
necessary movements with comparative ease. At another time, he appeared, directing 
me to breathe slowly and quietly, relaxing the nerves around the solar plexus. I felt 
that each time he came, I was refreshed in mind, body, and spirit. it has to be 
remembered that in cases of concussion, confused ideas of every kind crowd in upon 
the mind, which becomes both excited and exhausted. I was constantly enabled by the 
unseen helpers to cut off this continuous stream of impressions which were 
hammering at the brain. Underneath it all, I was made to understand that with patient 
waiting, restoration would come, and that I was not to worry or be anxious. 
 
One of the chief points that I should like to emphasise is, that a curious oscillating 
movement like the irregular swinging of a pendulum was a constant difficulty to me at 
this time; the rhythm of the body seemed to be entirely thrown out, and I was unable to 
bring the movement under control. It was as teasing as if one’s arm swung 
involuntarily from side to side, without one’s having the power to stop it. 
 
Dr. X. explained to me later the correct position of the three bodies, and that certain 
illnesses or accidents cause a temporary displacement and lopsidedness in them; part 
of his treatment was designed to put this right, and the relief which resulted was 
remarkable. 
 

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During the whole three months of preparation, the helper whom I ‘saw’ so frequently 
impressed   upon   me   the   importance   of   thinking   of   myself   as   lying  within  
an  oval- 
 
 
 
 
shaped outline in which I was completely enclosed; I was to breathe calmly and evenly 
within this enclosure; the object of this was to prevent the astral body from becoming 
diffused, and projecting too far from its normal position in relation to the physical. 
This exercise is an excellent one for lessening nervous fatigue, and for the prevention 
of that distracting feeling that one is helplessly pulled in many directions at once, and 
generally hypersensitive. 
 
One day, while I was lying in bed, the same unseen helper brought silver candlesticks 
and a crystal goblet into my room; what he actually did with these things, I could not 
quite discover, but in some way he was making use of them for treatment. So much 
was done before my actual visit to Dr. X., that it facilitated his treatment when I was 
eventually able to go to him. My first visit to him was, as I had foreseen, exactly at the 
end of three months from the time that my friend had first consulted him. 
 
Owing to the treatment which followed, the parts affected by the accident were 
completely restored, and my general health has been far better than before. 
 
The health-conditions of distant friends or acquaintances are sometimes impressed 
upon me in a curious way, although I may have been out of contact with the persons 
concerned for some time; occasionally, I have also known the remedy for their health-
troubles, and have been able to help in this way. 
 
By means of rapport-articles, it has been possible to diagnose the health-conditions of 
strangers, sometimes with great accuracy; the information comes to my mind in one of 
two different ways. Either, I see the organ which is affected, and know intuitively 
what is wrong; the body, in this case, appears to be transparent. Or, the trouble may be 
indicated to me by symbols, such as lights, colours, or lines in varying forms of 
arrangement. I gather something, also, from the rates of vibration in the movement of 
these lines. In connection with the colours, their clearness or dullness indicates the 
condition of health. 
 
The lines and symbols of which I have spoken are sometimes grouped above or below 
one central horizontal line, and their position with regard to it tells me whether the 
conditions are recent, or of long standing. The lines may run more or less parallel, or 
may be crossed in complicated formations; in the latter case, the health-conditions are 
usually rather disturbed. The thickness or otherwise of the lines, their straightness or 
waviness, all contribute to the correct understanding of a person’s health. 
 
Many of the readers of this book will have heard of Mr W Parish, the well-known 
healer, of East Sheen, or may have read the book about his work by Maurice Barbanell 
(Parish the Healer). Mr Parish allowed me to be present at one of his Healing 
Services, which was conducted in the beautifully designed little sanctuary built in his 

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garden. I was anxious to be there in order that I might ‘see’ (psychically) the Presences 
from the Unseen who inspire his work of healing. 
 
Sitting at the side of the chapel, I could see Mr Parish when going to the altar, standing 
within a complete oval of white light about three feet wide, like iridescent cloud. The 
impression was of another personality overshadowing him. 
 
 
 
At the beginning of the first treatment, when he came to patient number three, his back 
was turned to the east end as he treated the lady. My attention was arrested by a 
brilliant Figure by the altar, and instantaneously, Mr Parish turned completely round, 
and looked in the same direction as myself. 
 
I heard the words, ‘Because of thy faith thou shalt be healed,’ as though it were the 
voice of Christ, Who recognised that this woman had come believing, and therefore 
had received. I think she was well- nigh healed there and then. The friend who was 
with me had observed that she had a growth on her face. The Figure Who spoke shone 
with a brilliant light, and was indescribably beautiful. He withdrew into the Unseen, 
but I felt His Presence still there, although invisible. Her great faith had caused Him to 
show Himself momentarily. 
 
Again, when Mr Parish was speaking, immediately above the east end, there was 
clearly outlined the full figure of the Personality who is pictured behind Mr Parish in 
the portrait on the left-hand side of the chapel. The Figure was looking intently at Mr 
Parish. It was a marvellous Presence, bringing a heightened spiritual atmosphere, as 
did the former Figure seen. 
 
Right above the altar were small cherub- figures. Once, the first Figure was holding a 
child in His arms, and other children were with Him. 
 
Twice, written words appeared over the altar: ‘Blessed are the pure in heart…’  and 
‘Go…  sin no more.’ 
 
There were symbols and signs and Arabic lettering over the altar, but my attention was 
drawn away from these by two spirit-doctor standing close to Mr Parish. One appeared 
to have been a surgeon. Mr Parish was then treating a young man in the second row. 
The surgeon’s observation was, I felt, that in the opinion of most doctors, it would be a 
serious surgical case, later on, if not then. 
 
One very marked characteristic about all the patients was, that at the end of the 
service, all looked many shades lighter, the density of the body having grown less; it 
would seem that they had collectively been lifted into a higher state of consciousness, 
and one could pick out the cases where this was markedly so. 
 
The sanctuary was very full of unseen helpers and unseen patients; the few patients in 
the flesh were a small percentage of the whole number. The unseen helpers all radiated 
a madonna-blue light, and were actively co-operating with the spirit-doctors and the 
healer. One who had died was brought into the sanctuary, and was lying lifeless; he 
was carried by ministering spirits. 

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Mr  Parish  the  healer  appeared  to  be directed in each case to the seat of the physical 
trouble,  and  his  movements  were  as  if  guided  and  controlled  by Another. 
Streams of blue  light  emanated  from  his  fingers  and  hands,  as  he  passed them 
over the affected parts.  As  he  came  to  some  of  the  cases,  I  also was aware of the 
position and nature of the  trouble.  Although  his  eyes  were  tightly  closed,  he   
frequently  appeared  to  be looking  ahead  through  the  closed  eyelids;  in all 
probability, these were not his physical eyes.   The   appearance   of   the hands  when  
healing  was  beautiful;  they  held  a  quality  of 
 
power and benediction. The whole atmosphere of the sanctuary was permeated by a 
quietness which held great spiritual power. 
 
Let us turn now to a service of the same kind, conducted by another healer. 
 
A few minutes before the service began, the Healer entered the church, and walked 
towards the altar of the side-chapel, where he knelt in silence for a few minutes. Those 
desirous of being healed came to the altar-rails from the body of the church, and the 
Healer laid his hands upon the head of each in turn, speaking in a low voice words 
which I could not hear. An interesting feature of this Laying-on of hands was, that 
Two Other Hands  -  strong, powerful, broad  -  preceded the Healer in every case, and 
had already blessed and healed. 
 
From above the whole assembly, there streamed down great shafts of light of varying 
colours, each shaft reaching to the head of one of those present. 
 
Before the Healer had touched the head of the kneeling figure, where those Other 
Hands had previously touched, here and there I could hear words accompanying those 
Hands. This was strikingly so in the case of two people. 
 
One was an elderly lady, with short white hair, to whom the words were said, ‘Very 
great is thy faith; thou shalt indeed be healed.’ 
 
The second person was a young man with dark hair, to whom the words were said: 
‘Perfect healing  -  complete healing  -  is yours. You have wanted to join the Forces 
like other young men; you will.’ As this young man walked back to his seat, I 
happened to glance up. He was wearing a dark suit when he went up to the rails; as he 
came down, he was wearing military uniform with three stripes.There were others of 
whom I knew from half-audible words, that they would be healed in varying degrees. 
 
The eyes of this Healer were irradiated with an intense inner light, which was 
enhanced by the dim lighting of the church. I verily believe that he was inspired by 
Christ the great Healer of mankind. 
 
If, as many believe, we are in closer touch with that Other World than we often realise, 
receiving inspiration, help, and insight from it, we might expect also that comfort in 
sorrow and healing in sickness would come to us. 
 
I will close this chapter with an experience which I had in 1943. 
 

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During one night of that year, I awoke to ‘see’ with my inner eyes the figure of a 
monk standing in the open doorway of the room in which a friend and I were sleeping. 
He was clothed in a white robe with a girdle, and wore sandals. His figure was large, 
but his movements were slow and gentle. Before I actually saw him, I heard a voice 
say, ‘Hush! Here is Father Ambrose.’ The monk entered the room, and walked slowly 
across it to the fireplace. He then turned eastwards, bowed his head in prayer, and 
made the Sign of the Cross. Turning around, he faced me, saying these words: ‘I have 
travelled far  -  all over Europe  -  healing the sick.’ He walked slowly round, stopping 
at the bedside of my friend, who was ill at the time. He spoke aloud to her while she 
was sleeping, saying, ‘You have been sick, but you will be renewed and refreshed.’ 
He carried a coloured flask at his side, in which he dipped a finger from time to time, 
touching my friend with it. Before leaving her, he said, ‘I will ascend, and I will leave 
a light with you that shall guide you. The Lord bless you and keep you, and give you 
peace.’ He himself was surrounded by a bright light. Again he faced the east, making 
the Sign of the Cross as before, with bowed head; he then moved slowly upwards 
towards the ceiling, and passed through it. My friend’s sleep became more restful, and 
her breathing quieter; an atmosphere of great peace spread throughout the room. 

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CHAPTER XII 

 

DEATH AND THE AFTER-LIFE 

 
 
In this book, I have tried to indicate the variety of experience within the psychic field 
that comes into the life of a sensitive. 
 
One very marked feature of this experience is the ability to see and contact the dead. 
 
My own powers have been for many years turned mainly in that direction, in all 
probability because war pressed so heavily upon us all, and death was always before 
us. Death, as looked at by a psychic, cannot appear as it does to those without 
clairvoyant sight. 
 
Since the whole world is face to face with this problem, I think it well to close this 
book with some reflections on this profound subject, and upon its bearing on our life 
here. 
 
If any subject could throw a clear light upon this question of Death, it is psychic 
science. The sensitive’s power to ‘see’ and ‘hear’ those who are isolated by the silence 
of death suggests that we ourselves should reckon with his conclusions in seeking a 
truer view of this question. By gaining some understanding of the transition of Death, 
we are more able to turn away from the distressing circumstances which accompany it; 
circumstances which tend to linger in the mind of the person who is unable in his grief 
to project his imagination to what takes place after the event of death. 
 
With the newer views upon death, there is emerging a more comprehensive 
philosophy regarding the After-Life; and psychic science has brought to our 
knowledge a great deal that has helped in the building-up of that philosophy  -  a 
philosophy which is based upon proven facts. 
 
The public mind has been arrested by these facts that have come to light from a 
definite scientific study of the whole question. They are doing  -  and will do  -  more 
than anything else to heal the wound of personal loss caused by bereavement under the 
circumstances of the present time. 
 
Psychic investigation has demonstrated to us that there is, beside the physical body, 
another body known as the etheric, which co-exists in close affinity with the physical 
during the period of a man’s lifetime. 
 
When we think with horror of the shattering of the physical body under war-
conditions, we are thinking of the individual as existing solely in that body; whereas 
we have to train our minds to realise that death is in reality a transition of the 
individual from one body to the other, from the physical to the etheric. 
 
The individual is now removed from the suffering and horror that accompanied the 
collapse of the physical body; and we are short-sighted and blind if we linger in 
thought around what has taken place in the physical, instead of transferring our 
attention to what has actually happened through the change that death has wrought. 

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The unnaturalness and suddenness of the passing has held our attention over-long. 
 
Neither comfort, sympathy, nor diversion can do for us anything comparable to what 
the proven facts of survival can bring home to us; the first are mere palliatives, 
whereas the latter tell us what has happened to the individual whose loss is such a 
personal distress. 
 
Our emotions have been strained to the uttermost; and the reasoning mind turns with 
relief to this new science, which can give some definite knowledge in answer to the 
many questions clamouring in our minds. 
 
The important fact of the existence of the etheric body  -  which is in every sense a real 
body, a replica of the physical  -  has to be recognised. 
 
The etheric body has been proved to be equipped to function in the non-material world 
as effectively as the physical body functioned in the physical world. The very reality 
of the etheric body has proved to us without doubt the reality also of a world other 
than the physical, in which our dead now live. 
 
This is a very great advance upon the old conceptions of the After- Life. The spirits of 
the departed are, indeed, ‘in the Hands of God,’ but we should, in these days, do more 
than leave the matter there. 
 
If we have so far shared the life of the one who has died, we are now venturing to 
share that life still, even though it may be beyond our immediate touch. By so doing, 
we come to realise the continuity of existence, and to view life from a broader outlook. 
 
The progress of man’s life is a progress from imperfection and incompleteness to 
greater perfection and wholeness of the personality. 
 
This great change is of necessity a slow and gradual one; the break of physical death 
cannot of itself effect a fundamental change in the individual; that must be a matter of 
growth and development, as it was during his physical life. 
 
The Life in the Beyond, which we now know of a certainty to be real, is one in which 
we should be able to share, in order that we and they may progress together on our 
evolutionary path. 
 
The same idea is expressed in the Epistle to the Hewbrews, in the words ‘that they 
without us should not be made perfect.’ 
 
The religious ideas of Eternal Life or Immortality come to have a greater meaning for 
us. Immortality is not a condition into which we enter at death, but a state which we 
may partially attain whilst still on earth, as has been suggested by Dr. William Brown 
the psychologist. 
 
These considerations become a part of our working philosophy, and enable us to look 
at life from a new angle. 
 

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Instead of a bereaved mother saying, ‘Now that my son is gone, all has gone from my 
life,’ she will take a different attitude, such as is expressed in the following words 
taken from an announcement in a daily newspaper. 
 
‘Two years ago to-day,’ it ran, ‘my beloved child Diana passed to the Greater Life. 
God is Love, and through that power my darling comes to me. She has told me of the 
great happiness and activity of that life.’ 
 
This newer viewpoint reveals that love has outgrown the possessiveness which holds 
to the object of its affection, and will not let it go. The greater love leaves the loved 
one free to accomplish his life’s task, whether in this world or another. 
 
When we speak of ‘this world’ and that which lies beyond, we must accustom our 
minds to the conception of continuity in a very real sense, in that the two worlds are in 
no way separate, and probably interact frequently one upon the other. 
 
The proof of psychic investigation goes to show that there is interplay and 
intercommunication between the two states, and that contact is far more common than 
we realise, although the difficulties and complications of its functions are apparent to 
any student of the subject. 
 
As these things come more and more to be understood, we shall have to adjust our 
minds to a serious consideration of these truths; and this impinging of another world 
upon our own will bring a corresponding responsibility upon ourselves, first in 
endeavouring to understand the laws which are in operation, and secondly, to adjust 
our minds and conduct to the demands of this greater experience. In this way, our field 
of consciousness will be greatly extended. 
 
As we are coming to realise the existence of this other world, so we begin to 
understand that man is equipped with latent powers which correspond to that greater 
world, that he has been provided with faculties which enable him to make contact with 
it. 
 
The earlier chapters of this book refer to these powers. It would seem that in the 
future, there will be a great extension of interest and experiment in this direction, by 
those suitably equipped in mind for such work. 
 
The results of such investigation  -  apart from contacting those who have passed 
through death  -  will do much to dispel fear of various kinds, such as the fear of the 
Unknown, fear of the Unusual, fear of the Unexpected and the Accidental; because 
many of these will be resolved into some meaning. 
 
The fear of the Unknown associated itself closely with the fact of Death, because we 
did not know what followed afterwards; but now we do know, to some extent, what 
lies beyond the event of death, and consequently are less afraid of it. 
 
Fear of the Unusual caused people to cling to the old ways, change being looked upon 
as something to be dreaded rather than welcomed. And yet change is the very basis of 
all progress, even the change of death. What we used to dread as unexpected and 
accidental is often useful and necessary to force upon us a change of some kind. If we 

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had the insight to look a little way ahead, and to feel the implications of things, the 
unexpected would not appear to us in its old menacing aspect. 
 
We have already, by means of our supersensory powers, explored something of the 
world beyond death; and the use of the same powers has shown us a wealth of 
unexplored possibilities within the range of our life here. The study of these has been 
taken up by the psychical researcher. He investigates how one mind works upon 
another at a distance; how certain person’s perceptions can run ahead of time, 
following events that have not yet taken place; how premonitions are registered in the 
consciousness; and many others. These are normal extensions of consciousness, quite 
apart from the pathological conditions of disordered minds. 
 
The imagination is called upon in the study of our latent powers, as to how far these 
extensions may reach. There are startling cases of infant prodigies undertaking 
mathematical or musical feats, for example, which cause one to wonder what further 
discoveries may lie ahead. 
 
The discovery of the telepathic faculty opens up another range of new ground. What 
we learn there prepares us for equally wonderful possibilities in that other world, of 
which we now have a certain amount of perception we are already able to touch the 
fringe of it, and to communicate in some degree with those living within it. 
 
The transition of death takes us into a world of greater reality, as has been indicated by 
psychic research. 
 
We have been considering how this fact influences and reacts upon our life here. Let 
us now turn our imagination to picture the Life Beyond, and those who are living in it. 
 
We have been looking at Death from our particular angle; they also have looked at 
Death, and have actually experienced. Therefore, their attitude towards it is likely to 
show a greater insight than ours. It has also to be remembered that we are moving 
towards what they have passed through and left behind. We have to face the 
preliminaries of Death, such as old age and failing powers, whereas these are 
experiences which will never come to those who have died young. I doubt whether we 
allow sufficiently for this fact, when we think how terrible it is for youth to die 
suddenly. 
 
We have been considering all along how the better understanding of Death helps us 
individually and collectively; and how contact with those who have passed through it 
may give us the comfort and support that we need. 
 
When we consider this question of help and consolation from those in the next state, 
we must remember that they also need response from us. Although in this physical 
world our eyes and ears do not register the visions and voices that come from the other 
side of death  -  yet they can perceive with higher senses our thoughts and feelings. 
 
If we truly wish to be of service to them, we shall not hurt or distress them by 
despairing grief or self-pity; but we shall take a larger view which is more in accord 
with theirs. 
 

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Even in this life, our touch with them has not been solely through physical sense-
perception; we have contacted them through intuition and sympathy, by the power of 
silence in times of strain or trouble, by strong positive thought when they were absent 
from us and in danger. They have often looked to us to tide them over difficulties by a 
strength and posise on which they knew that they could depend. Suggestion in the 
right direction has a dynamic power which operates at all times. If we show them that 
we are fearless in face of Death, we have done more than we have any idea of in 
maintaining the truth that there is no death, though everything appears to point to the 
contrary. We are enabled to be fearless in face of death, because we know of a 
certainty that a real and vivid life lies ahead of those who have left us for that other 
world. 
 
There are, unfortunately, others who need a different kind of response and help from 
ourselves. They are those who have not lived ‘the good life,’ and do not therefore find 
themselves in surroundings equivalent to the ‘heaven’ of the Christian. There are, 
indeed places or abodes where happiness and peace are lacking, and out of which the 
evil- minded emerge but slowly, as their desire turns towards higher and better aspects 
of life. For these we should pray, for they dwell in an atmosphere of misery and fear. 
 
In a forthcoming book, I propose to deal more fully with this subject. The present 
volume deals with the Life Beyond in its higher aspects. I need hardly say that here 
again, I can only touch upon the fringe of that Greater Life to which our Dead have 
passed. 
 
Some of us are elderly, looking back upon life. We expect that youth in the Life 
Beyond looks back upon its experience here. 
 
In most cases, we are looking back with regret at what we imagine we have lost. This 
is partly an illusion, it would seem; for not many older people would really wish to 
return to the days of youth; and although many of the men who have met sudden death 
would and do long to be back again, which is very natural  -  yet the zest for life and 
the natural adaptation which is peculiar to youth carries them forward, and they see 
life in a new perspective. 
 
We have to replace in our minds the conception of that After-Life as being somewhat 
nebulous and unreal, with one of very different character indeed. There will be mutual 
help between ourselves and them in proportion as we are able to grasp and believe that 
all the activities that we associate with living, in its best sense, are still in operation 
there. 
 
There is scope for individual personality, and the powers of the human mind. We must 
not think that in the event of death, when the physical brain is destroyed, loss and 
disaster ensue; for then, again, we are thinking in terms of the physical senses only. 
 
Evidence goes to show that the personality is enhanced, and not impoverished. 
 
The desire for advancement which was the hope of the young man’s parents is not 
abated, but transferred to another sphere of fulfilment. If we know his interests and 
aspirations, we can surely follow him in imagination and close thought, in a very real 
sense. 

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Beyond the Five Senses 

75

 

 
There are diversities of opinion with regard to what that world is like, gathered from 
so many different sources that they vary widely 
 
We know, however, that beauty exists there in a far fuller degree than we as yet 
understand or have experienced. There are ranges of colours and sounds beyond our 
ken. They tell us of beautiful landscapes, and dwellings where they live. We might 
learn much more of their life, if we could think in terms of that life. 
 
A well-known personality has expressed it thus: ‘In future, we shall live in two worlds, 
and wonder that we could ever have been content to live in one only.’ 
 
By this, it is surely meant that we should extend our consciousness beyond the 
boundary of earthly perception, which we are beginning to do, but need to do in far 
greater degree. 
 
If this greater life is real and vivid, it has a most significant bearing upon our life here; 
and we cannot any longer live as though we were cut off from the Dead, and they from 
us  -  they in their world, and we in ours. It is incumbent upon us to understand that 
life is one, and to endeavour to live as though it were so; and that what we call the 
After-Life impinges upon our own. 
 
It is possible to transcend this world of sense in a very real way, by living in it to its 
fullest extent, and yet training our minds to reach beyond the boundaries of its 
immediate range.